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ie Page Two Or ‘orkers World STEEL AND METAL UNION 13.000 Silk Workers DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MO Continue Strike In STRIKES, DELEGATES HEA District Convention of Main Tasks; Work in Inside A. F. L., and NEW YORK, N. ¥.—The New Yor ers’ Industrial Union: has tripled its m bers, on the basis of leading and wi district secretary, reported yesterday t However, these gains have been made ¢ said, the chief task of the wi oeing the concentration o! finances on the hi chine shops, thi anc workers and other metal worke the heavier branches of the ind unemployed, of L More work among the better work inside the A. F. on the basis sten’ of the strike-breaking role of the N R.A., were the other major tasks of the union emphasized in Matles’ main report “At the last convention of the SM W.L.U. we had thirty to forty dele- Gates representing largely groups in unorganized shops,” Matles said “Now we have at this convention 96 delegates with 84 organized shops represented, where either the union or the shop commit s recognized. The silver strike, the hollow-ware strike, and especially the present strike of the 4,000 dock workers, shows the necessity of stronger exposure of the strikebreaking role of the A. F. of L. leaders, who are workin; Junction with the necessity of more wo F. of L. and inde only down the ing for lowe |Call Nat'l Conference to Form One Union In Silk, Dye Industry S. M. W. I. U. Reports| dD Heavy Machine Shops;! Among Unemployed PATERSON, N. J., Nov. 10.—Al- though the national strike front has been broken with the action taken by the United Textile Workers’ offi- | cials in sending the dye workers, the Jacquard workers and the Allentown silk workers back to work, the strike {continues solid in Paterson with | 10,000 still out and in Easton, Pa., only in the light metal industry, Matles | where there are 3,000 on strike under the National Textile Workers’ Union. In the dye shops the U,T.W. offi- \cials sent the workers back to work on the basis of a closed shop agree- | ment in which the strikers were sup- posed to be protected against dis- jcrimination and were to receive a minimum wage of $23. EERE SEE Since the workers returned to the; | Chamber of Commerce Glee Club, led | Shops three weeks ego, repeated vio- the singing of the Iowa corm song,| lations of the agreement have oc- | while the band played. Touching tes- | curred including discrimination, longer timony to his kinship for the ruined | hours and lay-offs. The U.T.W. has farmers of the state, Wallace’s smooth | not put up a fight to protect the palms were raised, as the Chamber| workers who are beginning to realize of Commerce choristers sang out,/ that the union officials are concerned | “That's where the tall corn grows.” | only with the question of dues col-| With gasoline nineteen cents a gal-/ lection. There is a growing opposi-| lon, those farmers who did come to/tion to the U.T.W. officials and in-| hear Wallace's alibi for the present creasing discontent in the ranks of | ruination of the countryside, were| the dye workers. | k district of the Steel and Metal Work- nembership to 2,800 dues-paying mem- nning strike struggles, James Matles, ‘0 the district convention of the union. Wallace Silent on Farm Debt Burden (Continued from Page 1) able to do so only by coming in groups | Employers have told the dye work-| on trucks contributed for the pur-| Fe ‘1 " pose. A large portion of the “farm- | oS that the agreement with the | U.T.W. was based principally on the | promise by the U.T.W. officials to call i a strikes in shops where the employers Des Moines police were on hand | ® 3 4 ef to prevent any possible demonstra- | Pefused to live up to the prices set by | tion against Wallace, and the recep-| the Dye Institute. Formerly the Dye tion received by Rooveve't’s S~--et>~y | Institute was able to punish under- of Agriculture was far from demon- Selling by the smaller bosses by em- strative. | Ploying gangsters. This expense would | N no Wall make refer- | 0W_be reduced by the readiness of | Se eee en Eee eee rant: | Acc#. Gf Lei difictalato: ast as thale : debt burden on the ruined farm-| agents in fighting the smaller com- He referred to the present farm | panies. | e being betrayed by the Milo| Silk manufacturers in Paterson are | Reno offi fiom only to sneer at|refusing to pay the $25 minimum| those “f ers” present were of the Wallace- Reno variety. hose who believe only in | “:olding out against recognition of the | Wallace declared, | ington to appeal to the N.R.A. raising | tical method of rais-| false hopes among the silk strikers ices and keeping them| that the N.R.A. will take any action ied what he described | against the bosses. 00,000 corn and hog pro- More than 800 workers returned to h,” de declared, “Would | work at the Onandago plant in Eas- $75,090,000 in rentals and bene-|ton, Pa., and will receive $2.93 for ailable to farmers of Iowa, if 100,000 picks, the highest rate paid are willing to take advantage|in the industry. The shop was on the basis of recognition of tional Textile Workers’ Union and the shop committee. Two other visions.” abet roposed plan is the familiar | the Na of cutting production. The signs the contract must reduce acreage of corn on m he is to operate in 1934 st reduce the number of | ss been raising by 25 per | must not increase the total | produced on other | rented or controlled by | h is not covered by a corn-| rented corn | owing, gr prevent! chine shop: 1 | report of Ge a ganizer rmer—broken on on four iec a rental at the | nd the was decided upon Tank and file grou unions and fight for to Wallace’s own illustration, ner rents, has been 40 bushels | he gets a rental of $12 an/| that rental he gets two- con as the cont are approved, ifi total of $160. $80 he receives a y riggers unions in the ship called for. The work among hhas been greatly of ngs, according to Wallace: | mills remain out on strike. GUTTERS OF NEW YORK “J promise a scientific distribution of relief.”—La Guardia. N. Y. Worker: “——!!—. Dish.” Official Admits Aid to Deputy Thugs in Jowal'armers Strike (Continued from Page 1) admitted that he had himself joined | the newly organized Law and Order League and defiantly declared: “T have joined the League and am | make the most of it. As vandalism | prompting it.” Farmers Protest Earlier in the evening farmers de-| | | nounced Reck, declaring that they} “didn’t elect a dictator.” They} charged that Reck as president of the | Association had no authority to say | that the Association would not go on! | strike, Reck was also charged with send-} | ing unauthorized telegrams to state | and national officers of the milk as- | sociations. | “He signs these telegrams without | be —by del It’s the Same Old et NOVEMBER 13, 1933 of the World Mass to FreeComm $ Protests Grow As London Police Attack | Delegation After Demonstration LONDON, Nov. 12.—Police this afternoon charged 200 Communists attempting to send a delegation to the German Embassy, demanding “the release of our innocent Ger- man comrades, Dimitroff, Torgler, Taneff and Popoff.” The delega- tion was sent by a meeting of sev- eral thousand workers in Trafalgar Square. Several workers were in- jured by the attack of the police, ies eee NEW YORK.—The tide of protest against the contemplated execution of the four Communist leaders on “trial” for the Reichstag burning kept rising higher and higher as | many trade union student and pro- | fessional organizations and individu- als threw their entire support be- hind the fight to save them from the Nazi axe. ‘The strength of 35,000 workers will mass behind a Needle Trades Work- ers’ Industrial Union delegation when it appears before the German Consul here today to demand the release of Dimitroff, Torgler, Tanev and Popoff. Raising the slogan of “Swastika Out of New York!” the National Stu- dent League is mobilizing the stu- dents of New York in a demonstra- tion Wednesday before the MacMil- Dickstein Silent on | Calling of Hathaway. Re Tar | Angrily Refuses Reply , on Nazi Exposure By SEYMOUR WALDMAN (Daily Worker, Washington Bureau) WASHINGTON, D. C., Nov. 12.— Samuel Dickstein, chairman of the rers who raise corn and| wage proposed by the N.R.A. and are| proud of it. If that is un-American,| House Immigration and Naturaliza- tion Subcommittee which will open |A. F. of L. The Associated officials | has increased here I have been hor-| interim hearings Tuesday on Nazi first time in the history of | yesterday sent a delegation to Wash-|Tified by the un-American spirit | propaganda activities in the United States, today angrily refused to say whether Clarence Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker, will be asked to appear before the investigating body to read into the official record the ly Worker’s international exposures | of Nazi murder, espionage and aa | eganda activities in this country. Dickstein’s noncommittal reply con- trasts sharply with his statement made several weeks ago to to the Daily Worker that Hathvway would “invited” to appear before the committee, lan Theatre, Columbia University, where Hans Luther, Nazi Ambassa- dor, is speaking. The students will mass at 7:30 p. m. on the corner of 16th St. and Broadway. At Wed- nesday noon they will picket the fac- ulty luncheon which is being given for Luther at Columbia University, carrying placards urging the faculty members, to boycott the luncheon. The National Committee of Un- employed Councils sent a protest yes- terday to Hans Luther, German Am-~ bassador, against the “fascist sav- agery of the Hitler government,” and demanding the immediate release of Torgler, Dimitroff, Popoff and Tanev as well as Ernst Thaelmann. “The German working class does not stand | alone,” the communication read. “We workers of the United States and the tional Committee of Unemployed Councils, are rallying to the support of the German proletarian revolu- tion.” Saturday a delegation of 24 writers and lawyers appeared befor the Nazi Consul to demand the freeing of the four Communist leaders on trial in Berlin. When the Consul dashed out enraged from his office, Allan Taub, I. L. D. lawyer, faced him and de- manded that trial defendants be unemployed workers, through the Na- | ield of corn on the 20 acres y, called the Silk Worker: It is understood that Dickstein |plans to convene his subcommittee | tomorrow in a short secret session to Ohio Delegates March {map out the course of the hearings. CHICAGO.—Reports of new delega- | 7ormal public sessions begin Tuesday. Martin Dies of Texas, the proponent The United National Strike Com-| seeking our views regarding these mittee organized at the initative of! matters,” one farmer declared, ional Textile Workers’ Union < + . ling a conference of represen- tatives from all silk centers in Pater- | AS eter son on November 19 to discuss the| tions of farmers coming e his- formation of one union in the silk trie Farm Conference to be held at | of the bill which bears his name and and dye industry. ‘The conference is | Chicago on November 15-18 at People's | Provides for “the exelusion and expul- to be held in Paterson on ‘Nov. 19,| Auditor are arriving every day, | ‘in of alien Communists,” 1s a mem- At the same time the National Tex- | Lem H Executive Secretary an- jes ae tks samgrenon ube tile Workers’ Union in Paterson is|"0unced today. Lercine Gu on one oe peli ~i]| , Ohio will witness another march of | Carolina; Underwood, Ohio; Crowe, organizing a shop delegates’ council | r.rmers when 100 delegates going to | Indiana; Kramer, California; Dirksen, composed of representatives of every! th Conference will pass through the | Hlinois; Taylor, Tennessee, and Focht, mill and of every department in the| state en route to Chicago. | Pennsylvania, freed. He protested against the so- called trial as a farce and asked if the Nazis intend to carry out their murder plans. The Consul refused to answer their questions, telling them to “wait till the trial was over.” As the delegation left the office they gave cheers for Dimitroff, Torg- Jer, Taneff and Popoff. Those in the delegation were David Levinson, Allen Taub, Malcolm Cow~ ley, Edward Dehlberg, Isidor Schnei- der, Horace Gregory, Philip Henberg, A. T. Cutler, Joseph Freeman, Ken- larger plants to meet regularly to Wi a a neth Burke and others. form a united front basis for build- priest pete ey Gian ae pera Protest telegrams were sent to ing one union in th of “Cash Relief,” |Route 18 to Defiance County. There | #48 Luther. Nazi Ambassador, from | industry. All s of Back Taxes and/will be short receptions at 10 a, m.|'he Finnish Workers’ Federation, en. up by Poor Farmers,” and|in Medina and at noon in Wellington, | 4Merican Committee to Aid the Vic- tims of German Fascism and other organizations. CARNIVAL LUNCH STRIKE WON BY FOOD WORKERS NEW YORK.—After being out on strike for three weeks, under the leadershi ers Industrial Union, 68 workers of the Carnival Lunch at 140 E. 14th St., won their strike Satur- | The delegates will be entertained for in any gains won in| Ness,” etc. The delegates will enter] the night by the farmers of Defiance counteract any be- | Ohio by two lines of march on Sun- | County, practiced by the U.T.W. of-| Gay afternoon, November 12. |__ The other line of march from New} d |__ The first line from Pennsylvania | York and New England will also enter | New Jersey, Maryand, Delaware anc | Ohio on Sunday afternoon over Route | Virginia will enter Ohio on Route 30,/°0, stopping overnight near Austin-| bulletin | opping overnight with farmers in| burg and proceeding the following Meet | Salem Township, Columbian County.| morning to Fulton County, stopping | : Voice. The| with additional delegates from Salem|in the morning for a reception ar- | Council will meet on November 19 at| township the caravan will then prow prepare the a the in 40 shop delege council for which has been laid will also publish a hops, tion of unemplc local n. Mi ee : g advocate Oakley Hall, 211 Market Street, Pater- Wallace, who is a strong advocate . unemployment ts in the ir t decid became Reoose-|Son at 10 a. m, and mass layoffs can the near future, it wu The discussion of from the shops, along reports (of whicl be mentioned for ob brought out examp’ siruggies, winning demands from boss. The posting of a notice in Pederal Steel Prodv-ts company, t there would be no w until the committee conferring with the boss hhad reported to the workers, had big effect in winning the wor demands there. Other delegat brought out thet the Ne are denied jobs in this industry, youth workers are forced to do the same work at lower wages, under the title of “apprentices.” Rose Wortis gave greetings from the Trade Union Unity League of New York, with which the 1 Metal Union is affiliated be the viou: A resolu- tion was passed endorsing the na- tional convention against unemploy- tment in Washington on Jan. 13. The mti-lynching convention in Balti- uster was elected district presi- of the union, Matles was re- secretary, Powers and Lustiz elected as district organizers, Oher'-- ‘-‘rews as vice president, Rivers as recording secretary. tings were received from the il offi-> of the union, signed } John Meldon. Baltimore Delegates | Must Register by | Tuesday Evening NEW YORK. — All delegates to} | Baltimore anti-lynching Con-| ve traveling by bus must reg- not later than Tuesday, Nov. 8:30 o'clock at the district of- of the International Labor De- 870 Broadway. Delegates Teave Saturday, Nov. 18, at! A. M,, from Irving Plaza Hall, | Plaza and 15th Street, The | for delegates going by bus is) including all expenses, | and | « ‘on Nov. 18 was indorsed. Wm. | riculture after ceed on Monday morning over Route 14 to Edinburgh, thence west over | ranged by the Small Home and Land | Federation on the Public | Owners’ Square in Cleveland at ten o'clock. day when the owner: reed to their demands. he had helped swing the corn belt |to the Democratic Party by his de-| Y th D { . . e . e ° mn of approval of the farm t Hit A : t W D ] outlined” in Roosevelt's To- ou emonstrations Hit Arm/'stice War Displays , He had de-/| s the Republican Party in 1928 | na sia - ae to support Al Smith. NEW YORK.—While military and) their organizations, shouting “Down | Ex-Servicemen’s League, War-Re-, Police say they destroyed the pla- In his speech here last night, Wal-| government officials thioughout the) with Imperialist War, down with | sisters’ League, Conference for Pro-| cards because of a city ruling against lace spoke as a “dirt farmer.” His| nation celebrated Armistice Day with h recentiy merged with| here demonstrated their defiant op- the ‘owa, Homestead,” and experi-} position towards imperialist war by ments in the cross-breeding of hogs| two meetings and a parade. at his 490-acre farm in Polk County,| The militant challenge to the war near Johnstown, Iowa, |danger was hurled Saturday when Ww e sought to justify the gov- | the organizations united in the Youth ernment aid to the bankers instead| Committee of the American League of to the ruined farmers dirt farm experience is limited to an| military displays and pacifist phrases, | nee of a publication, “Wal-| over 600 young workers and stucents | participating organizations addressed | U. U. C., and | Fascism!” | At the Monument speakers of the | |the workers and students, urging | them to fight against the war prep- | arations going on under the N, R. A. and the Civil Conservation Corps. The speakers emphasized the need for militantly protesting the war | Provocations against Soviet Russia, | gressive Labor Action, Labor Sports} Union, I. W. O., Youth Section of T. the I. L. D. Cait ii NORTHAMPTON, Mass., Nov. 12.—| mighty hiss greeted the police as) thoy seized several placards carried | by Smith, Mount Holyoke, Amherst | and Massachusetts State College; students who were marching in an} there are | Against War and Fascism mobilized | the workers’ fatherland. ‘They urged! anti-war parade here today. The more serious problems,” he said,| their membership at Columbus Circle | that the workers and students “be-| placards, reading “The N, R. A.| hich, within a democracy, can best} and marched to the Soldiers’ and} come traitors to the ruling class of| Means Nationalism and Wer,” were | be settled outside the halls of Con-) Sailors’ Monument, at 88th St. and| their own country and refuse to fight | carried by the National Student | gress. We are not yet a people skilled | Riy de Drive, | to protect their profits.” | League chapter of Mount Holyoke | in these problems, which are of the| Along Broadway, along Riverside! ‘The organizations participating | College. | heart.” Little comfort to farmers | Drive, through the heart of the “silk| were: National Student League,| The demonstration was led by! facing eviction after years of toil. | stocking” district, the demonstrators | League of Struggle for Negro Rights,| Adam Lagrin, recently dis ed from Wallace continued to depart from | paraded, carrying the banners of| Young Communist League, Workers’! C. C. N. Y. for anti-R.O.T.C, activity. his prepared speech. He was back in his old home town. He must be neighborly; “Only the merest quar~ | |ter-turn of the heart separates us |from a material abundance beyond |the fondest dreams of any one pres- 1H" scant S| MAR INPEKI jent, Selfishness has ceased bel eae if NM o | the mainspring of progress. ere is | |something more. We must learn to| SOVIET UN live with abundance.” Little comfort | . ue - | to farmers battling in sub-zero wea- |ther with armed deputy sheriffs and their law and order leagues, i | | Wallace's father was Secretary ot | | Agricuiture in Coolidge and Harding | regimes | Besides inheriting the farm paper, | | Wallace inherited talent for cunning | ;demagogy, as revealed in his recent |speech before the Iowa Legislature, | called to consider farm relief abel | posals, when he said: “The pity is that the bankers, the | insurance company executives, the} packers, the millers, the cotton spin- ners, the railroad executives, the oil | executives, etc., cannot meet together | to work out a program which will be | lene for them and best for the farm- | ers” “bearing inscriptions detrimental to any government.” National Student League leaders say that they will take action against the police, Cea a Wellesley Students March the American Legion paraded into celebration here, 75 Wellesley College girls, carrying anti-war placards, swung in behind and marched to a position divectly opposite them, hold- ing high their placards. American Legion officials were | furious at the injection of en anti- war spirit into the ceremonics and charged that the girls “were parad- ing without a permit.” FASCISM MEETING AT COLUMBUS CIRCLE WELLESLEY, Mass. Nov. 12.—As_ the main green in an Armistice Day | unists ‘Execution of Four ‘Communists Looms’ | nition and T lotted time for relaxation. We expression goes. brated Thinker, but no ping pong players. The three of us were rather crumpled and dusty from having pleyed association football behind the building, and the girl at the informa- ‘ion desk looked apprehensive. “Pardon me,” I said, “Are there paintings or statues of ping pong pisyers in any of the galleries?” “Ping pong players?” “Yes.” She searched behind us, possibly for uniformed attendants, then she turned to consult with the elderly lady, ostensibly an authority. “We don’t know,” she said finally, “but we don’t think so.” The elderly lady came up. “Do you think there are any in the Louvre or the British Museum?” T asked. Both of them pursed their lips and the authority said no, she didn’t think so, oh) ie, sw 'E WALKED cast down 79th Street and stepped into the library there and I searched through several dictionaries of quotation and literary allusion but there was nothing about ping pong. It began to appear that the sport had never gained enough of a hold on sensitive imaginations to make its way into belles lettres or the representative aris. It was at my own home, in volume 18 of the New International Ency- clopaedia, that I found the first reference and that was scurrilous: “A modified form of lawn tennis . . . (sic!) ... The game became popular in the United States about 1900, but as it was inherently uninter- esting and required comparatively little skill, its vogue was short- lived, and within a few years it had virtually disappeared.” Another reference was exultantly pointed out by a youth who found it in a movie magazine: Eddie Cantor, his wife and five adolescent daughters are impassioned devotees of the pastime. The Encyclopaedia is a 1914 edi- tion and the movie magazine is last month’s which not only reflects unfavorably on the New Interna- tionale’s accuracy but in a measure indicates the game's current status. Ping pong has gone a long way since the origin of that snotty quo- tation. It was a bitter, uphill fight asainst conditions fraught with mockery, decision and indifference. The sport (I'll stand by that clas- sification) was ridiculed not only as “inherently uninteresting and re- quiring little skill” but as effeminate and decadent as weil. There was something perverse and degenerate about endless!y pinging and pong- ing a ball of air encompassed by resilient celluloid, they said. A game from Nazi Axe 3 . Ping Pong HE following is the partial outcome of research during a Saturday afternoon, which is the Daily Worker staff’s al- ! ¢ were coming out of the Metro- politan Museum of Art, discussing the problem heatedly, as the We had looked at statues and paintings of boxers, discus ? heavers, fishermen, chess players and even an unjustly cele- for the immature and incapacitated. Red-blooded water polo, ice hockey and roulette players, matadors and Pago-pago performers frowned at this illegitimate lawn tennis. Ping pong, the Spurned of Sports, the Pariah of Pastimes. . 8 e She Becomes a Rage. Ww ALL know how ping pong came through with flying colors. It swept two continents like cross-word puzzles or the Three Little Pigs, only it came to stay. People discovered that to be really proficient in it re- quired extraordinary skill, also, that you could work up a devil of a sweat if you were up against a fast player on the regulation table. For a short and disastrous period I attended City College, the institution where they play football, and it can truthfully be said that if not for the ping pong tables in the alcoves I wouldn’t have stuck it out for even three months. The school will still be recognized as one of the cradles of American ping pong when the Umbrella Man will be but a footnote. In Europe the game has developed to a stage where great international tournaments are run off successfully, I know this circumstance will be here ee) 2 who ascribe ele- ments of decadence and degeneracy to it, but consider as well its popula. ity in the Soviet Union. There no recreational center is complete with- out the green tables and they have & room full of them in the Kremlin itself. For American workers’ clubs it’s an ideal winter sport. You can Play it indoors, accessories are inex- pensive, the appeal universal and competition easy to organize. It’s not only to do right by our little ping pong but to display the in- teresting growth of sport conscious- ness in the revolutionary movement around New York that I print the below letter. It’s the second such idea within & few days. Last week they had a wrestling bout at the ball of the Theatre Union. “NEAR E. N.: “The United Front Supporters is an organization made up ot professionals and other white collar workers. A while ago we formed a study group which grew to large pro- portions and soon transformed its theories into action. We have al- Teady raised hundreds of dollars for the Scottsboro Fund, the Marine Workers’ Industrial Union, etc., and every month we pay the rent for the headquarters and the apartment of the East Side Unemployed Council. “This Friday we're running a dance at Webster Manor, 119 E. 11th St., for the benefit of the Daily Worker and a8 a special attraction we're having ae ping, pone ave give an ex- on and play all comers. We cordially invite you and your readers, “United Front Supporters.” \Shoe Strikers’ Mass| Meeting for Today NEW YORK.—Mass meeting of shee strikers today 11 a. m. at Ar- cadia Hall, 918 Halsey St., Brook- lyn, The shoe strikers will act on the final decision of the National Labor Board. It is important that | all strikers be present and every chairman should march in with his crew and sit together in the hall. There will be signs for every crew in the hall. | A special emergency Shop ; Chairman’s meeting will take place today at 9 a. m. In Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St. to dis- cuss the proposals of Dr. Handler, Chief Counsel for the National | Labor Board. Sheet Metal Workers Strike in Brooklyn NEW YORK.—Workers of the J. tfoss & Sons, sheet metal shop, 78 19th St., Brooklyn, went on strike Saturdey, demanding, union recog- inereased wages. The strike is led by the Independent Sheet Metal Workers Union of) Greater New York, On Saturday the Daily Worker has 8 pages, Increase your bundle order for Saturday! DR. JULIUS LITTINS 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet, Pitkin am@ Sutter Aves. Brooklyn PRONE: DICKENS 2-901 Offies Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M. SFR COHENS’S 117 ORCHARD STREET Nr, Delancey Street, New York City Tel. ORchard 4-4520 Wholessle Opticians Factory on Premises BYES EXAMINI By Dr. A.Weinstein ‘Optometrist All Comrades City Even Anti-Lynch Conference NEW YORK.—A special conference in connection with the forthcoming public hearing in Baltimore Nov. 18 on the lynching of George Armwood, will be held this evening at the Fin- nish Workers Hall, 15 West 126th Street, under the auspices of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights. An important point on the agenda will be discussion of the new lynch trials of the Scottsboro boys, set for Nov. 27, before the Ku Klux Klan cee W. W. Callahan, at Decatur, Mass Meeting on Cuba Manuel Marsul, Cuban Journalist; Frank Ibanez, editor of “La Van- guardie,” and Mario La Marr, secre- tary of the Julio Mella Club, wil) discuss the Cuban situation at a mast meeting tonight, at 8:30, at the club's headquarters, 1413 5th Ave. City. WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. ¥ NEW ESTONIAN WORKERS’ HOME 27-29 West 115th Street New York City RESTAURANT and BEER GARDEN — DOWNTOWN SS JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12 & 18 Welcome to Our Comrades Meet at the NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Food—Proleterion Priees 62 .. 13TH ST., WORKERS’ CENTER-——- AOR RE IEE ee