Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
f / ae ST, PAUL ARMOUR PLANT U _ SHUT DOWN SOLID, STRIKE. DAILY WORKER UNEMPLOYMENT IN SHARP INCREA EW YORK, WED NOVEMBER 22, 1933 nemployed Prepare for National Convention Page Three SE AS ROOSEVELT CUTS RELIEF DELEGATION IN ANNAPOLIS Demand Relie| and Unemployment Insurance TODAY 10 DEMAND ARREST MAY SPREAD TO SWIFT'S Clevetand Lays of AOE. of L. Offe rs to Scab; Industrial Union Wins Demands in Two Shops; Newspapers Raise Red Seare for Bosses ST. PAUL, Minn—The strike of packinghouse workers at the Armour y Plant in South St. Paul has completely closed down the plant. Since last ® | Thursday night the picket lines around the plant have stopped all produc- on. Only a few men are allowed inside to keep the refrigeration system oing. The workers in the Swift and Cudahy plants may walk out any day ih support of the Armout workers¢—— and for their own demands, The strike had organized and is led by thé Pz jouse Workers Indus- trial Union. ‘The strik thru their union pre- sented the foll ng demands: 1) 10 8 i y per hour; 2) 32-hour guarantee and a maximum }of 40 Hours per week; 3) time and }@ half for over time over 8-hours per | day; 4) slowing up of the speed of | production; 5) abolition of the piece work system for women, and estab- | lishment of a 45-cent per hour mint- | mum. for women; 6) recognition of | the Union and elected Department | | committees. When these demands were refused by the company, the } strike was declared. When the Super- | intendent of the Armour Company) | at first claimed that he does not | know whether the committee speaks § for the men, the Department chair- men went out and collected the signatures of 1,200 workers author- izing them to represent them. But obviously this was a maneuver of the company to gain another day. A. F. of L. Leaders Act The real strike-breaking face of the A. F. of L. leaders was shown when McCoy, of the A. F. of L, but- cher-workmen’s union, issued a state- ment that his union (AF.L.) is not making any demands and that they are willing to go to work provided | they could get thru the picket lines. | This-is an open strike-breaking pro~ | paganda and a provocation for break- } ing the picket lines which up till now have been solid. McCoy’s state- Ment is a forerunner of what the jther A. F. of L. leaders and the ‘armer-Labor officials are planning to do. The rank and file of the A. F. of L. are more and more in sym- } pathy with the Armour’s strikers. } One Department at Swifts took up } a collection of $28 for the Armour strike. Tonight, Monday, Nov. 20, a mass meeting will be held of Swift workers to decide on whether they | will join the strike. United Packing Grants Demands | As a result of the strike so far, the United Packing Co. a small | packinghouse in South St. Paul, | which is 100 per cent organized in | the Packinghouse Workers Industrial Unton, has granted the demands to the committee representing the work- ers and the union. The Superior Packing, another small plant, has offered the workers to stay’on the Joo and that they will get the same ‘onditions and wages as the Armour Workers will after the strike. How- ever, the Superior plant may close down because no cattle is coming in. (OUT OF TOWN AFFAIRS FOR THE Shenandoah Section The outstanding film “War Against tht Centuries” will be shown in the following towns on the dates listed below: November 22nd: Pottsville, Pa. November 23rd: Shenandoah, Pa: At Sweets Hall, Lloyd and Main Sts. November 24th: .-Kiiflmont, Pa.: At Liberty Hall, 10th and Pine St. November 25th: Shamokin, Pa.; At 412 N. Shamokin Bt. St. Louis, Mo. November 26th: <Monster Banquet #t Peoples Finance Bldg. Tickets 50c. So. Norwalk, Conn. November 24th: Film showing of the Soviet movie “Phe Two Thieves” at the Workers Genter, 102 Washington St., ab 8:15 P.nt. Auspices of 1.W.O. Branch 67. Philadelphia November 24th: “Concert and Dance given by Sect. 1 at 1208 Tasker Street. Free! 50¢ GIFT Free! DR. BERNER’S CUT RATE UNION DRUG STORE 131 Rivington Street Dr. Berner takes great pleasure “in announcing that he has signed up with the Pharmacist Union of Greater New York We gilarantee our prices to be the low- ‘est in the eity of New York Morey will be refunded to anyone purchasitig any article which they esn purchase at a lower price anywhere else. Upon presentation of this advertisement, Dr. Berner will give you a 50c gift free! | | | The spirit of the strike is great in spite of the propaganda in the neWs- | papers. As usual in such cases, the | Armour Co. and the newspapers are trying to prejudice the strikers by aising the “red scare” and that the union is “Communist.” Of coutse, there are Communists in the union; and some of the best fighters are Communists. The control of the strike is in the hands of the workers, thru its Central Strike Committee of 22, each one of them having been elected by the workers in one Depart- ment. Buffalo NRA Labor Board Breaks Cable Fabricators Strike Connives With Com- |pany to Defeat Men’s Demands BUFFALO, Nov. 20—The strike of the Cable Fabricators Union (A F. L.) was broken Friday afternoon by the local N.R.A. labor board headed by Fr. Sichorn, president fo Canisius College. is The cable workers in the General Cable Co. plant had joined up 250 strong in the union, out of 400 in the plant, and had presented demands for 10¢ an hour increase for day workers and 20 per cent increase for piece workers. When ©. A. Somersides, manager of | the Buffalo plant, refused to listen to the demands, the union had Cla- rence Conroy, A. F. L. representative, try to start negotiations. When he failed, they called in Thomas Wil- liams, Labor Department negotiator. ‘When Somersides still said he was wiling to negotiate but there was | hothing to negotiate, the leaders could hold the members back no longer and they voted to walk out on Fri- day, Nov. 10 (two days later), if the company had not given in by then. They walked out and have been on strike since. Today the local labor board got them to meet Somersides and C. E. Yates, a company man from the New York office. N. Grammer, big grain elevator official who helped “settle” the grain shoveler’s strike, took command of the meeting. When the company men protested they had always been willing to ne- gotiate with all union men, including company union men, Grammer talked the unino into calling off the strike and going back to work next Mon- day. The company promised to resume negotiations next Tuesday with the labor board as mediator, but stuck out for not hiring back all the strik- ers, on the pretense that work has fallen off seriously since the strike began, and that some of the scabs have been promised they would not be fired. Proof that the labor board is work- ing with the company is seen in the fact that the board talked the lead- ers into calling off the strike in time for the men to go back to work (all for whom there are jobs) by Monday morning. When workers went to get their last pay yesterday, one week after walking out, they found notices in their enveloves that scabs would be hired to fill the place of every man who did not return by Monday mor- ie at 7 o'clock. ‘ Arresting All NMU Leaders in Gallup Gov't Sends Major Moore to “Mediate” GALLUP, N. M,, Noy. 21.—Coinci- dent with the report from Wash- ington that the National Labor Board has directed Major John Moore to proceed to Gallup to “mediate” the three month old strike, there has started a drive to arrest all NMU leaders in the town. This is an attempt to make the strike leaderless so that the miners would be left in the treacherous hands of Major Moore, who like his predecessor from the National Labor Board, 0. W. Grubbs of Cal- ifornia, will seek to betray the min- ers. As a result of the demonstration last Saturday, which was attacked by Sabres and bayonets, Gen. Wood succeeded in arresting ‘actically all representatives of the Union and I. L. D. whether they were in the demonstration or not. Charles Guynn, National Repre- senitative of the Union in Utah, im- mediately rushed to Gallup, but was arrested by the militia as soon as he entered Gallup. Artested with Gaynn was Henry Sumid, and Joe Bartole of the Relief and Defense Gommittee. Only & mass protest from all over the country will release these Un- ion, ILD, Relief and “CL leaders, All Out for Daily Worker Tag Days, Nov 24, 25, 26th! ‘8,000 in One Month, | Cuts Down Relief One-Third Are J obless; Councils Prepare Convention By F. ROGERS (Organizer 8. M. W. I. U.) CLEVELAND, Ohio, Nov. 21—With the first blast of winter and snow comes the news that jobs have de- clined by 8,000 in Cleveland during the month of October. Relief agencies are crowded with workers demanding relief. Jobless men are breaking into vacant houses for shelter and are arrested for burg- lary. Single men have been herded into the forced labor “Woodyard” for soup and coffee in exchange for sev- eral hours hard labor. Single women and girls, homeless and hungry, are picked off the street for “loitering” as women of the streets and sent to jails and the workhouse. Men, women and children; also many war veterans, are seen beg~ ging for alms while standing in door-ways for shelter from the cold and snow. This is the picture from the outside. The misery of the un- employed may be multiplied a hun- dred-fold inside the tumble-down shacks without heat, light or water and the empty shelves, cupboards and tables. This is Cleveland, model NRA. city after three months of Roosevelt's New Deal! One Third Jobless, There are 132,280 jobless in the city with 33.5 per cent out of work, “who would work if they coul@ find jobs,” according to the statistics of the Cleveland Chamber of Commerce. These figures are of course “official and for publication” but do not in any Way compare with the real figures, which would show an alarm- ing situation and criminal neglect by the County Welfare Committee which is responsible for the distribution of food, clothing and coal, to the freez- ing and starving unemployed of Cleveland. The County Relief Committee even boasts that it succeeds in not giving relief to everybody who applies, altho the number of unemployed has in- creased. A recent document reports of a “ray of optimism in that it showed 4 slight declirie in the ratio of number of families given relief as compared to the number of jobless.” “Tt has been going up steadily for four years,” the report continues, “but in | October dropped one point from 29 to 28 per 100 although jobs decreased by over 8,000 during this month.” 59,288 in Forced Labor Camps. A recently published report by the U. 8. Government shows that 59,288 Ohio youth are in the Roosevelt forced labor caimps. These youth slave for $30 per month to keep up their families at home who have been taken off the relief list. When these youth return home after months in the camps, penniless and hungry, they find their home just as destitute as when they left. Some have to wait months before getting back on the relief list while fake in- vestigations go on why the youth re- turned home from the camps and if the family needs relief, etc. Prepare for Convention. ‘The Unemployed Councils of Oleve- land have been busy in this situation. A number of open hearings on hunger and want have been held in the vari- ous neighborhoods. Politicians have been challenged to appear to make good their election promises. Thou- sands of circulars have been distrib- uted calling upon the jobless to or- ganize into the Unemployed Councils to defend their homes and fight for relief. All this activity is leading to the sending of a large Cleveland del- egation to the National Convention of the Unemployed Councils to take puree in Washington, D. C., on Jan. 13th. ‘The single men and women are the hardest hit in Cleveland. Especially is this true of the Negro population. If a single man applies for relief he is told to go to the “Woodyard” where he may find shelter and soup in ex- change of long hours of hard labor, chopping and sawing wood which goes to the homes of the rich to make a cozy open fire in their mansions, The fifth winter of the crisis finds the conditions of the unemployed most unbearable. Workers, both em- ployed and unemployed, must fally in masses to active support and cam- paigning for federal tnemployment insurance at the expense of the em-« ployers and government instead of the bally-hoo of the N.R.A. News Briefs Lindbergh Lands Safely! HORTA, Fayal, Azores Islands, Noy, 21.—Charles Lindbergh and Mrs. Lindbergh landed here safely late this afternoon after a battle against squalls and rain storms in hig 1,000-mile flight ftom Lisbon. eae No Funds for “Investigation” NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 21—Chair~ man Tom Connally of the Senate Sub-committee investigating the Huey P. Long political regime in Louisiana announced today that the Committee's funds were so low it beat not complete the scheduled work, * * Assassination Attempt Fails TOKYO, Nov. 21.—An attempt to assassinate former Premier Baron Feijiro Wakatsuki who was chief of the Japanese delegation at the Lon- don Naval Parley in 1930 fatled to- day. The attack was made by two “patriotic” fascists, a prizefighter and a former soldier. “Help Yourself” to Poison | hE lle Manhattan. Moldy rotten meat and sandwiches collected from garbage cans out-~ side restaurants, is offered to starving workers on the East Side of lower Pe ety Party Splits Unemployed Form New Group With Trotskyites; Has Pro-| gram of Unemployed Council But No Action | By JACK MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Nov. CARSON. 21—The roots of the Unemployed Council | of Minneapolis have begun to sink in amongst the followers of the Farmer | Labor Party. Action Committees of who were previously affiliated with the F. L. P. began to appear before the Farmer Labor Aldermen in the Wards with demands, forcing certain actions aie in the interest of the unemployed. Birth Rate Drops 1800 in Sept., 1933 NEW YORK.—The birth rate in New York State declined by 1,800 in September, establishing a new minimum for all months, accord- ing to the State Health Depart- ment. The rate for September, 1933, was 13.4 for each 1,000 com- pared with 16.8, the average for September, 1928-32. Infant mortality, according to the same source, jumped 6 units in September, 1933, over that of the same month in 1932. ‘Arrests Face Families Cut From 1 Relief NEW YORK —An indication of the wholesale arrests and intimida~ tions confronting the 2,000,000 fami- lies which Pres. Roosevelt and 500 Mayors decided to drop from the relief rolls, has been sent in to the Daily Worker by worker correspond- ents in Chicago and Ohio. In Chi- cago, a mother of four children, Mrs, Agnes Knebel, received a 30- day sentence, and Joseph Villareale, father and sole support of seven children, was given 4 60-day sen- tence. Both had been attempting to aid their miserable relief check with part time jobs. In Sebring, Ohio, 200 families were dro from relief on suspi+ cion of having other iticomes, whether some infrequent part time jobs or from selling chewing gum on the streets. These fatnilies will be forced under the threat of jail sentences to return all relief mon- ies to the city. ‘The brutal callousness of this ac- tion was revealed in Chicago after Mrs. Knebel wag sentenced to 30 days by Judge Bdickson. “But what will my children do,” asked the mother who was being jailed for having a job as scrubwoman, “I haven't the retnotest idea,” was the judge’s indifferent response. 1,000 Demand Aid At Phila. Bureau Compel Recognition of| Jobless Council PHILADELPHIA, Nev. 21—One thousand unemployed workers dem- onstrated at the West Philadelphia Relief Station at 3ist and Market St., forcing the supervisor to register all the needy cases, and to promise recog- nition to any delegation sent by the Unemployed Council. After an open air meeting outside the station the workers jammed into the office demanding coal, clothing and relief where it had been cut off. This demonstration is a preliminary to the Hunger March to be held Wed- nesday, Nov. 29 at 12 noon at Rey- burn Plaza, jen this point that we had to break the Unemployed made up of workers, | Mr. I. G. Scott, Farmer-Labor Alder- man of the 10th Ward, had numer- | ous Committees in his office, demand- ing action to improve conditions of the unemployed in that ward, forcing him to even join with their commit- tees in demanding things from the Welfare Board. F, L, P. Uses More Demagogy. In the 9th Ward, strong Farmer | Labor Ward, fifty per cent of the membership of the Farmer Labor Club have joined the Unemployed Council. In the 12th Ward the move- | ment of the Unemployed Council has taken on a mass character, forcing the Farmer-Labor Alderman, David Bloomberg to sign the Workers’ Un- |employment Insurance Bill. In the | Sixth Ward the Organizer of the Un- employed Council, Harry Mayville, has come close to defending Mr. ePterson, the oldest Farmer-Labor Alderman, in| Minneapolis in the last city elections. The Farmer-Labor Party got alarmed. The Reds, as they term the Unemployed Council, are making too much progress amongst the unem- ployed. They resolved to use more “left” maneuvers, to use more dema- gogy in the attempt to hold back the marth of the unemployed. Forward came the most “left” of the F. L. P. the Bennets and Youngdohls, Farme Labor Members of the State Legi: lature. But even this was insufficient. The Farmer-Labor Party resolved to make use of its “Most Left Wing,” the Trotsky renegade group in Min- neapolis. United Front Against Unemployed. On the 29th of October a confer- ence on “Unemployed Relief” was called and the proposed program was @ masterpiece of radical phrases and a reaetionary program, such a pro- gram could only come as a restilt of the intermarriage of Farmer-Labor and Trotskyites. The program called for new “Self Help” schemes and for the organization of a new unem- ployed membership organization tih- det the leadership of the Farmer La- bor fakers. While the Trotskyites took for themselves the ideological leadership of the conference they hid themselves behind the.skitts of the Farmer-Labor government officials and the leadership of the A. F. of L., who came to the forefront as the face of the conference. (This upon a defi- nite agreement.) The delegates from the Communist Party and Unemployed Council suc- ceeded in laying bare the program pro- posed and introduced the program of the Unemployed Council for the im- mediate demands of the unemployed in the city, also the “Workers’ Unem- ployment Insurance Bill.” The “Recovery Program,” as they called the original proposed by the ‘Trotskyites and the Fermer-Labor fakers, was defeated. The full program of the Unem- ployed Council, was adopted; the Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill was endotsed. The fakers swung to new maneuvers, to the adopting of the program of the Unemployed Council in words, while rejecting the Unemployed Council as the organiza- tion for the unemployed, and went in favor of building @ new organization, which they named the Minneapolis Central Council of the Unemployed (attempting even to steal the naime of the Unemployed Council.) It is with the conference. The Unemployed Council {in the | nieanwhile is increasing its activities | in the neighborhoods and is organiz- ing a city-wide demonstration in the Court House, to present the demands cf the unemployed to the City Coun- | in which we can put women to work.” | Unemployed Women to Get No Relief in Roosevelt Plan White House Makes} No Provision for Them OF LYNCHERS OF ARMWOOD Body Elected by Anti-Lynching Conference Will Push Demands for Punishment of Known Leaders of Mob BALTIMORE, Nov. 21.—A delegation elected by the Eastern Anti- Lynching Conference held in this city on Sunday will go before the State | Legislature this Wednesday to demand that it indict the known lynchers WASHINGTON, D. C., Nov. 21—| of George Armwood, Negro worker who was lynched on the Eastern Shore Admission that at least 250,000| wothen are unemployed in New York | City alone was made before Mrs. Roosevelt in a conference at the|nard Ades, International Labor De- ) #mong other things at frustrating on October 18. ruggle for Negro Rights, and Ber- The delegation will be headed by Richard B. Moore, General Secretary of the League of¢— is “The recommendation aimed White House. The obviously false | fense attorney. jture attempts of attorneys of the figures given by Roosevelt's repre-| Impelled by the exposure of his|1LD. a Communist affiliate, and sentative, Federal Relief Director | role in the lynching of George Arm- |Similar organizations ‘from 1 4 Hopkins, were that there are be-| wood, made before a tribunal of local|Courtrooms the sounding tween 300,000 and 400,000 women un- | employed in the entite country, and |tellectuals at the public inquiry last |sanda.” The this was followed by the reading of a telegram from Claire Lewis, of the National Employment Service of New York, admitting that there were nearly that many jobless women in New York City. The conference made it clear that the jobless women are not to be given relief, but any action was delayed, and the only ultimate action proposed is forced labor and not relief. | Although it was announced that| the meeting was called to decide on| what portion of the public works} fund would go to jobs for women| unemployed, no action was taken which would benefit the unemployed | in any way. The question of any immediate rellef for the unemployed women was buried by the conclusion of Hopkins that those present were to “think and report public services | Another proposal was to “make ac- commodations in clubs available to) women at moderate rates” and where | the ynemployed women are to get| the money to pay for these “accom- modations” was not stated. Thousands of men have already been taken off the relief rolls under | the Roosevelt forced labor scheme. Now it becomes clear that women| who are unemployed are to be de-| nied relief as well. Jobless Feared by LA. Relief Heads Leave Town to Avoid) Delegation of 100 | LOS ANGELES. — Mass pressure | through Hunger Marches and demon- strations forced most of the county supervisors out of town when a dele- gation of 100 from the United Front Conference Against Hunger went to demand more relief for the jobless. The boss press commented on this Tun-out act with the statement that: “Big business (or what is left of it) is having a sporadic action of j&ters following the Nov. 7 Hunger March.” The delegates cornered two of the supervisors, Thatcher and McDon- ough, and Thatcher, forced against the wall, stated he was in favor of the Federal Unemployment Insurance Bill, but he didn't think he could do anything about it. D, A. Sullivan was spokesman for the group, and Sun- shine LeClair spoke for the unem- ployed women. Scottsboro Meet In Birmingham Sunday BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Nov. 20.— With mass resentment rising against the State-inspired preparations to} hand the Scottsboro boys and their) attorneys over to a Ku Klux lynch | mob, preparations are being made here for an overflow meeting for the Alabama Scottsboro Anti-Lynch Con- | ference to take place in this city on Nov. 26. Widespread indignation against Ku Klux Klan Judge W. W. Callahan is rising to a high pitch following his denial of protection for the nine boys and their defenders. Hundreds of protest resolutions are pouring into Decatur and workers from a number of large steel mills and mines in and around Birmingham, as well as many locals of the Sharecroppers’ Union in the heart of Alabama's Black Belt have already pledged support of the Conference and mass meetings at 3 p.m, next Sunday in Temple Baptist Church, between 14th and 15th Sts., on Sixth Avenue, North, Birmingham. Sharecroppers from the embattled | areas in Chambers and Tallapoosa | Counties, Benjamin Davis, Jr. Ne-| gro International Labor Defense at- | torney for Angelo Herndon, and Jane | Speed, southern white girl, will be among the main speakers for the | freedom of the nine innocent boys | and against lynching. | The tremendous determination and | heroism of the workers and their sympathizers hete in the heart of terror-ridden Alabama is indicated in | the remark of a Negro worker who} told an ILD. leader, “If they 0 | much as harms a hair on the heads of the Scottsboro boys or their law- | yers, we're sure going to have the death penalty for them lynchers!”| The Conference is jointly called by | the Southern District of the ILD. and the Alabama Committee Against Lynching. } cll on Friday, December 1, at 9: | A.M. | Preparations for the State Confer- | ence of the Unemployed to present | demands for Unemployment Insur- ance and Winter Relief to the Special Session of the Legislature are going on, it is in work and militant struggle that we will succeed in fully unmasking the Farmer-Labor leaders | and their “left” brothers, the Trots- kyists, for what they are—agents of the ruling class in this state, |torney, announced it would recom- * and out of otown workers and in- Saturday, Gov. Ritchie yesterday sug- gested that the circuit court judges of the Eastern Shore displace State's Attorney Robins of Somerset County, unless he carries out the instructions of Attorney General Lane to arrest | the lynchers. Robins, who is exposed | in the affidavit of Captain Spencer, | published by the “Daily Worker,” as an inciter of the lynch mob, has re- fused to make the arests, declaring that the lynchers would be released by a new mob if jailed. Ritchie has refused to remove Rob- ins, but passes the buck to the cir- cuit judges, thus continuing his policy of piling up alibis for himself, as | when on the day of the lynching of Armwood he called up Rabins and | Judge Duer to ask if there was any | plete freedom demanded danger of “trouble,” but at the same | time refused to order the removal of | Armwood from the Eastern Shore or to send troops for his protection. He now declares there is no “legal cause” | to remove Robins. | Coincidental with the Public In-| quiry and anti-Lynching Conference, the State Judicial Committee, head~- ed by Herbert R. Connor, State’s At- mend to Ritchie changes in the judi- cial procedure so that “wherever the courts have reason to believe an at- torney has injected himself into a| criminal case that has attracted pub- lic attention, either on his own int-| tiative or as the representative of | some organization, an investigation | be promptly instituted by the court” | to bring disbarment proceedings. { The Baltimore Sun admits that the proposal is directly aimed against Bernard Ades, Levinson and other ILL.D. attorneys, especially in cases} of defending Negroes. The “Sun” | prisonment, Governor states: brani Sun's” stateme: rectly refers to Buel Lee, Negro work- er, legally murdered by the State of Maryland, and George Armwood and Matthews, Negro victims of the Bast- ern Shore lynch orgies. Partial Victory Won in Brighton Case DENVER, Colo.—Forced to commute the death sentences against three Spanish-speaking boys at Brighton, framed on murder charges, to life im= lvin Johnson has refused to grant them the com- y the Inter- National Labor Defense, though & statement issued by him stated that the evidence against them was dis- credited. The I. L. D., which through mass action forced this partial victory from Governor Johnson, has announced that it will continue fight, through every legal ipporting mass action, until t 2 The three Bright Roy Vigil and Candel because of their mil among the Mexic: were framed on cha ing a wealthy fa: brought out at innocence, and ible implicat selected of in the guilty v The I. L. D. t will continue its their particul: arefully ‘s brought ced that it ete re< ar ht fe versa of the t by taking to the U. 8. Supreme C of the systematic and of American from grand a: Beacon, N. Y. Private cars leave daily CAMP NITGED AIGET Cooperative Restaurant, Phone: Beacon 731 The Only Workers’ Camp Open All Year HOTEL WITH 60 ROOMS Steam Heat, Hot and Cold Running Water in E Wholesome Food, Sports, Cultural Activities Best Place to Rest Price: $14.00 Per Week (including press tax) ch Room. at 10:30 a.m. from the 2700 Bronx Park ON THE APARTMENTS CULTURAL Kindergarden; Classes for Adults and Children; Library; Gymnasium; Clubs and Other Privileges NO INVESTMENTS REQUIRED SEVERAL GOOD APARTMENTS Take Advantage of the Opportunity. Workers Cooperative Colony 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST has now REDUCED THE RENT (OPPOSITE BRONX PARK) AND SINGLE ROOMS ACTIVITIES & SINGLE ROOMS AVAILABLE Lexington Avenue train to White Plains Road. Stop at Allerton Avenue Station, Tel. Estabrook $-1400—1401 Office open daily Friday & Saturday Sunday 9 am, te 8 pam. 9 am, to 6 p. 10 a.m, to 2 pan. HE Sports Column of the with the Labor Sports Union PRESENTS CLARENCE HATHAWA Announcer: JOE FREEMAN WRESTLING TOURNAMENT at HARLEM LABOR TEMPLE, 15 West 126th Street WEDNESDAY, NOVE Tickets on Bale: er Oe in a Talk on- “SPORTS AND REVOLUTION” Workers Bookshop, 50 F. 13th Si 126th St.; Labor Sports Union, 813 Broadway. Ringside 75e, General Admission 50c. PROCEEDS TO THE DATLY WORKER DRIVE Daily Worker in Collaboration Y, Editor of the Daily Worker Also a Sensational Exhibition MBER 22, at 8 P. M. Harlem Labor Temple, 15 W. a s