The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 24, 1933, Page 2

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DA Rank, File Painters Tit Aid to Zausner 3ySocialist Forward four Léedls Refuse to Pay 50°Cent Tax to Zausner Racket NEW YORK.—Seeking ide of revolt. among t Ye against. the vhich we mposed on the hip witl its « t, t yer controlled Machine of ars District Council t support of: the Jewish I © further» its, caw ng. ‘ Rank and file pain wd 848 decided. to to 50 cent Forward of racketeer- register if unemployed, on the ground hat the tax was not being used for organization. purposes as the officials iad promised, but for purposes of welling the pockets of the officials and strengthening- their strong arm supporters. In a slanderous attack on the cour- ageous action of the rank and file he Socialist dai es up in sup- port of the gangsters and racketeers of the Zausner clique. The Forward falsely states:that 20 per cent of the receipts of the tax goes to the un-} smployed, although every unemployed ank and file painter knows that out of the $125,000.collected in the past 3 months, onlythe clique itself bene- fitted and thé funds went to the| strong arm men: | Local 499: at-tis meeting Wednes- | day night repudiated the Forward and condemned it: for its provocation and open support of the notorious Zausner and-the rest of the bosses’ agents in the District Council. The| local officially-:voted down the tax.| Nearly 1,800 painters are now refus- | ing to pay th®-assessment, includ-| ing in addition to 499, locals 848, 803 and 490. Detroit Shoe Workers’ Union Settles Long Strike at Garafallo Shoe Shop NEW YORK.—A jay by the Industr y at 12 followin; on the ord ions for Jan. 2 ions in those shops where dis- tes exist, election of delegates to Amalgamation Convention in on on Dec. 12 and the calling sf shop crew meetings for the elec- tion of a Joint Council. As we go to press the union’s membership meeting at Arcadia Hall hag started with the hall packed to the doors. City Even To Speak On N.R.A. Lewis Corey, author of “House of Morgan” and economist will speak on the “Trends of the N.R.A.” tonight, | 8 p. m, at the National Student | League, 114 W. 14th St. | First Aid Class In WIR Registration is now open for work- ers to receive first-aid training by a competent physician under the aus- pices of the Medical Units, WIR. Class will be held tonight, 8:30, at 870 Broadway. ee Concert and Dance A Concert and Dance will be held at Webster Hall tonight, the entire proceeds to go to the fund for the Reichstag victims. Rabbi Goldstein and David Levinson, who was at the Terzani “Defense’ 9 Decides Against Protest Action NEW YORK.—With the trial of thos Terzani, anti-fascist worker, i on charges of murder, com- eens County court 3 must be held, ‘otest ions taken in connection with the trial The only ones opposing this stand, utive of the Deiense C , were the representatives of the The New York District of the s independently called for} protest activity, to save , in the form of protests and/ ams to Judge Thomas C. Ka- dien, Jr., at Queens County Court. | Terzani is charged with the murder} of Anthony Fierro, an anti-fasclst student, who was killed a member of Art Sm Phila hia Khaki hirts, at ng in Astoria, L. I., July 14. The actual murderer was pointed out to the District Attorney by Terzani at the time, but was re- leased by the police, who picked an anti-fasc worker for their victim and set the frame-up machinery in| motion. Bakery Workers In ‘Joint Strike Action NEW YORK.—Strikers of the| Dugan baking plant at Queens Vil- lage met yesterday and organized a joint strike committee with the A. F. of L. drivers. Every department | in the plant elected its representa- tives to the strike committee. | Drivers and bakery workers are} picketing the Brooklyn branch of the| plant at South 5th Street and several} distributing centers. A committee of strikers went to| NRA. headquarters today to report/ a : “ - trial in Germany, will speak. Celebration of the]|- that although the Dugan Co. flies | —OHICAGO— LISTON M. OAK Will Speak On “Soviet Union and World Affairs” Sunday, Nov. 26th, 3:15 P. M. BUCKINGHAM HALL 55 E. Van Buren Street Admission 35¢ Auspices: Friends of the Soviet Union Recognition of the Soviet Union by the:United States turday, Nov: 25, at 8 p. m. JERICHO TEMPLE 2705 Joy Road near Linwood Speaker: LISEON M. OAK Editor,:Saviet Russia Today RICH. MUSICAL PROGRAM Auspices, Friends of Soviet Union ‘oit Loeal | the Blue Eagle, the bosses have re-| | fused to deal with the union, The | Workers, however, do not expect. to| | win their demands through the N.R. | A. but through militant strike ac-| | tion and are making intensive plans to spread the strike and tie up the remaining plants in the city. ‘A. F. of L. Rank, File To Meet Saturday | SONIA RADINA , Famous Dramatic Soprano Will appédr in a Soviet Concert of Classical, Folk and Revo- { lutionary ‘Songs, Russian and Ukrainian, in costume on | SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26th, 8 P. M. Masonic Temple Auditorium, 32 W. Randolph St., 14th floor | JOSEPH ROSENSTEIN, Violin Virtuoso will be the assistant artist | Come and demonstrate your solidarity with the Cultural Achievements ' ‘ of the Soviet Union ETS can be procured at Lyon & Healy, Jackson and Wabash; Work- ers’ Book Shop, 2019 W. Division St.; Kroch Book Shop, 206 N. Michi- gan Ave.; Royale Cafe, 3854 W. Roosevelt Road. AUSPICES: FRIENDS OF RUSSIAN MUSIC NEW YORK.—Elected delegates of | the rank and file members of A. F. jof L. unions will meet on Saturday ad 2 Pp. m. at Irving Plaza to take an important forward step in | Strengthening their struggle against | the officialdom. The conference will |help to consolidate all the forces | within the unions in New York for a strong movement for unemployment insurance and relief for the coming winter of continued widespread unem- ployment, The meeting is called by| | the A. F. of L. Committee for Unem-| ployment Insurance. With the lest convention of the A. F. of L. ignoring entirely the question of unemployment insurance and the A, F. of L.’s past record of failure to aid its jobless members, the program of the unemployed becomes the chief point of the agenda of the| rank and file conference. Protec- tion of the jobless members against suspensions and methods of struggle to obtain exemption of dues for the "| jobless will be discussed at the con- } | — Chicago — CONCERT AND DANCE SATURDAY NIGHT—DECEMBER 2nd atin | Peoples’ Auditorium, 2457 W. Chicago Ave. Admission 30c—With Plugger 25c BENEFIT OF THE DAILY WORKER ference, The question of intensifying the fight aginst racketeering and gangsterism of the A. F. of L. offi- cials, for equal rights for Negro work- ers, and against injunctions will also} be considered at the meeting. T.U.U.L. Class | Comrade Hathaway will conduct | a class for all trade union func- | tionaries on Saturday at 3:30 p.m. in the Workers School, 35 E, 12th third floor. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY i DAILY WORKER Sunday Evening, November 26th at JEFFERSON MANOR HALL Broad and Jefferson Streets PROGRAM Bella Dorfman — Artef Piay by John Reed Club FRIENDS OF THE SOVIET UNION td BRONX COLISEUM CHAIRMAN ....... «oe. CARL Speakers: HERBERT GO CORLISS LAMONT VICTORY BANQUET ‘MASS VICTORY RECOGNITION MEETING ..-Wednesday, November 29th, 8 P. M. 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet, Pitkin and Sutter Aves, Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-301 Ofties Hours: 5-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-6 P.M. Drydock 4-452? Harry Stolper, Inc. Optician 73 Chrystie Street, N. Y. C. Formerly with the I.W.O. AND THE ICOR EAST 177th STREET BRODSKY LDFRANK ILY WORK , NEW YORK 24, 1933 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER |GUTTERS OF NEW YORK NEW YORK RACKET No. 4 The East Side abounds with rabbis who (for a fee) will delve deep into the Talmud and foresee the recovery of a very ill dear one. Dear Comrade Freeman: Thanks for your contribution, and will gladly let you have the original of the cartoon you requested. Minute investigation of your letter discloses only Brooklyn, N. Y., as your address. I understand that John H. McCooey the Tammany boss always gets mail addressed to him in this manner. However, I hate to classify you with him. Please enlighten us by pee mail or, if you prefer, call at the Daily Worker office any P. M. Comradely yours, del. Helping the Daily Worker through Del: Peter Canavan 10 Total Dockers’ Strike Is Stronger as Mass Picketing Starts. (Continued from Page 1) workers. The Navy Yard workers held. meetings in their shops to take | up collections for the strikers, in re- sponse to a special appeal by the Steel and Metal Workers’ Industrial Union, urging their solidarity and support. A committee of workers, elected by the strikers at a meeting of the Boilermakers’ Union, also ap- proached the Navy Yard workers for relief. Officials of the A. F. of L. Metal Trades Department and Building ‘Trades Council turned down flatly the request of the strikers for relief for their families, who are now facing starvation after six weeks of strike, Although enormous sums are avail- able in the treasuries of the officials, they refused to grant the request for relief on the ground that 80 per cent of the shipyards workers are not yet organized in the A. F. of L. Prac- tically all the strikers have paid sums of $1 or more to the A. F. of L. ‘unions, applying for membershin, but this is not sufficient for the A. F. of L, officials, who are not ready | to part with the funds they wish to pocket for themselves. The A. F. of L. is contributing so little to the strike that the workers are com- pelled to raise funds among them- the picket line. The latest announcement of the regional N. R. A. that the strike is to be turned over to the National Labor Board has created false hopes among some of the strikers that the federal government will take some action to aid their strike. The Steel and Metal Workers’ Union is warning the work- and textile strike, where the Na- tional Labor Board sent the workers ing their main demand of recogni- tion of the union, thus betraying their heroic struggles. \Philadelphia to Hold Banquet for the Daily Worker PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—A Daily Worker Victory Banquet will be held here this Sunday evening, Nov. 26, at Jefferson Manor Hall, Broad and Jefferson Sts. | _ Features will include the Workers | Laboratory Theatre, a play by the | John Reed Club of this city, Bella | Dorfman, of the Artef. | An address will be delivered at the banquet by a prominent speaker. New York Jobless | to Get $1 a Day at Compulsory Labor (Continued from Page 1) basis of #iving’ union wages, but on | the basis of $1 a day pay to workers | who have been deprived of unem- | ployment relief. 50,000 On Forced Labor Here | NEW YORK, N. Y.—Fifty thousand | Unemployed, now getting relief, will | be put on forced labor at government | Jobs in New York City by Dec. 15, and another 40,000 a few weeks later, |the State Temporary Relief Admin- | istration announced today. Another | 200,000 will be put on forced labor. The Roosevelt forced labor program |is being speeded up. The Relief Ad- |selves for the signs to be used on/| ministration, which now also repre- |sents Roosevelt’s Civil Works Board, |emphasized that “the men will be | expected to work hard and be punc- | tual,” and that the administration can fire the forced labor employes at will. Those fired will not be transfered to relief lists. The Unemployed Council calls or! all unemployed workers to at once Jers of the results of the coal, steel | Organize committees to demand union Boi and working conditions on forced labor jobs, and to protect the ___|back: to their jobs without conced-|men against discrimination. Hold a house party for raising funds for our Daily Worker. —by del|District Committee of | | C. P. Greets Bedacht on Fiftieth Birthday NEW YORK.—The New York Dis- trict Committee of the Communist Party yesterday sent its greetings | to Max Bedacht, member of the Cen- tral Committee of the Communist | Party and National Secretary of the International Workers Order, on his fiftieth birthday. The District Committee stated that “The Bolshevik persistency of Com- Bedacht and ceaseless energetic Since the foundation of our t, is an example that inspires and encourages the thousands of Par. |ty members who have worked with him. | | | Par’ the statement continued, “Comrade Bedacht has contributed vastly to the struggle for the Bol- shevization of our Party, and to the; uncompromising struggle against op~- portunism. Comrade Bedacht’s name is also identified with the struggle against sectarianism in the early work of our Party, and with the struggle for the line of the Comin- | tern. Comrade Bedacht’s steadfast | devotion to the Comintern and the | American Party was proven in his struggle against the Lovastone rene- gades and enemies of the Comintern and working class. “Long life to Comrade Bedacht! Many long years to his leading of revolutionary work!" ae Max Bedacht will be tendered a banquet in his honor tomorrow, Sat- urday night, by the Communist Par- ty, New York District, and the Cen- tral Committee of the I.W.0O., at Irving Plaza Hall, 15th Street and Irving Place. Among the speakers will be Earl Browder, Clarence Hath- away, James W. Ford, William Weiner and Charles Krumbein. Harlem Meet to Hit Lynch Danger’ (Continued from Page 1) |to lead the parade. Young Conimu- |nist League members will be on bicycles, and will also carry placards with rousing slogans. The Prospect | Workers’ Band, the Red Front Band, the band of the Workers’ Ex-Service- men’s League and of the Workers’ International Relief will play along the line of march, Speakers will be Allen Taub, the I. L. D. attorney who barely escaped lynching’ in Alabama at the hands of groups incited by the capitalist press; Charles Krumbein, New York district organizer of the Communist Party; Richard B. Moore, general sec- retary of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, who will speak on the resolutions adopted in Baltimore at |the recent Anti-Lynch Conference; |Max Bedacht, national secretary of |the International Workers’ Order, \and William Fitzgerald, Harlem sec- tion organizer of the I. L. D. An important point stressed in the \I. L. D. statement referred to Police Commissioner Bolan’s edict to police- men ‘which “has cdused the arrest of many Negro and white workers walk- ing together on the streets. . The New York police, the I. L. D. stated, evs ettamnting to terrorize the work- jers in their growing movement to iderity. White and Negro workers must put their shoulders to- gether. Get out on the streets on Saturday, smash the barriers of race! Mass by thousands and present a solid united front! It’s up to the white workers to pour imo Harlem from all parts of the city on Sat- urday, The eyes of their Negro comrades throughout the country are on them! Organizations should mobilize with their placards and banners in the following streets at 1 p.m. sharp to- morrow: Sections 1 and 2, Communist Party —118th St. and Lenox Ave. FS. U., all I. L. D. Sections and “Ix-Servicemen—l19th St and Lenox Ave. All Trade Unions—120th St. and Senox Ave. ,City Clubs, Jewish and English; Sections 5 and 15, Communist Party— 121st St, and Lenox Ave. Section 4, Communist Party, Fin- nish Federation and League of Strug- \gle for Negro Rights—12éth St. and | Lenox Ave. NEWS FLASH DETROIT, Mich, Nov. 23, ~ Admist preparations for the Na- tional Daily Worker Tag Days, De- troit collected $124, and rushed this amount to help save the Daily Worker. All workers in Detroit are urged to participate in the tag days and put Detroit over the top in the $40,000 Drive. . NEW YORK.—Ten thousand Daily Worker National Tag Day boxes have been distributed to working class or- ganizations throughout the country. The tag days start today, and will continue Saturday and Sunday. Every District reports the lack of volunteers for the tag days. It will be criminal if these ta day boxes lie in the organizations’ headquarters un- used, A special call is issued by the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, for full mobilization of its membership for the three tag days. The unton’s headquarters, 4th floor, 131 W. 28th St., New York City, has been added to the list of tag day stations. All food workers are called upon by the Food Workers Industrial Union to support the Daily Worker, which Supports all their struggles by con- tributing and by participating actively in the tag day campgign, Food Work- ers are to go to the nearest station Tag Days to Rally Support for “Daily” our Daily Worker. Visit shops, of- fices, factories, workers’ homes, ap. proach workers on the streets with Daily Worker Tag Day Boxes on this Priday, Saturday and Sunday. All Districts, airmail lists of your sta- tions immediately. NEW YORK CITY DOWNTOWN—Wworkers Center, 96 Ave. ©. East Side Workers Club, 165 East Broadway. MIDTOWN—Greek Workers Club, 269 W. 25th “Bt; Armenian Workers Club, 56 W. 26th St.; Needle ‘Trades Workers Indus- trial Union, 131 W. 28th st, Midtown Section: Armenian Club, 114 Lexington Ave., near 28th St.; Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, fourth floor, 131 st. W. 28th st. FOOD WORKERS UNION The Food Workers Industrial Union calls on its entire membership to participate in the tag days. Get collection boxes from the station nearest in your territory as Usted in the Daily Worker. Aandi veces ‘UNIT 26, SECTION 15 Unit 26, Section 15, New York City, is mobilizing’ {ts entire ‘membership for ‘the tag days. ‘The entire unit territory will be canvassed by the members this Sunday to raise funds. This unit, which raised $13.47 for the “Daily,” challenges all other units in the Section’ to equal its work in the tag days, EM—Finnish Workers Hall, 15 W. Prospect Workérs Club, 1187 . Boulevard; Bronx Workers Club, 1400 Progressive Workers Center, Ave, 188 Sumner BROWNSVILLE —- Brownsville Workers Center, 1818 Pitkin Ave.; American Youth Club, 105 Thetford Ave.; Hinsdale Workers Club, 313 Hinsdale st. JAMAICA—Jamaica Workers Oenter, 148- 29 Liberty Ave. CLEVELAND SECTION 1 Ukrainian Labor Temple, 1051 Auburn Ave.; Hungarian Workers Home, 4909 Lorain Ave; Finnish Workers Home, 4528 Detroit Ave.; Bulgarian-Macedonian Workers Home, 10515 Madison Ave., rear. SECTION 2 South Slav Workers Hall, 6021 St. Clair Ave., 3td floor; Workers Center, 756 E, 105th St.; Lithuanian Workers Hall, 920 E. 79th jr man ‘Workers Hall, 7010 Wade ark Ave, 7 ; SECTION 3 Jewish Workers Center, 14101 Kinsman Rd, Hungarian Workers Home, 11123 Buck- eye Rd.; Uj Elore headquarters, 5366 Broad- Ww il Workers Center, Woodland Ave., 3rd floor Unemployed Workers Hall, 3874 Payne Saunt ‘Station, E, 27th St. and Payne: 14 i Workers Center, 11 Coltman Rd.; Un- employed Workers Hall, 15: Saranac Rd; Martuocl Home, 15906 Bt. Cleir Av ELPHIA 1187 N. 41 St.; 434 N, 62 St.; 1747 N, Wil- 15 N. 6 3843 126th St.; Esthonian Workers Club, 27 w. | tom St; 1231 N. Pranklin St.; 715 N. 115th St.; Harlem Liberator, 2162 7th ave, | 999 N. 5 St; $113 Dauphin St; 2456 N. 30 YORKVILLE—Hungarian Workers Home, | St: 32 St.; 2222 Master St.; 1208 360 KE. Bist St. qT 5 St; 710 Passyunk LOWER BRONX—Workers Center, 689 | A\ 2530 N. 2 8t.; 1810 CANTON, OBIO Workers Center, 1101 8. Tuse. Bt-; I.W.0. one of the founders of our) | A General Who Wants Peace included in the new ukase Hitler’s dictator of sports. OU may be familiar with the notorious “Aryan -paragraph” of Hans von Tschammer-Osten, According to its provisions no Jew may be elected to any office or board of a German organization, and no woman unless her father, brother or husband likewise athletic leagues,” headed ex- clusively by Nazis, of course. ‘This order is issued to reaffirm the discrimination policy against which the American Amateur Athletic Union protested in a surprisingly firm note last Monday. The tone of the note alone was surprising, not the contents. It made no mention of the terror against worker's athletic organizetions. This aspect of the Nazi sport policy apparently slipped the mind of. the Jewish Welfare Board’s representative who was ins- trumental in pushing through: the vesolution.- Still, the note was firm in its threat of boycotting the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin, unless as- surances are received of a new policy. This was Monday. The attitude of the capitalist press may be summarized in the stand taken by Paul Gallico, sports editor of the New York Daily News: The AAU. was meddling in matters which don’t concern “us.” They were gumming up the works as usual. Here they're creating a war atmosphere between two peaceful countries. Fat- heads. All three editorials on the subject I have at hand regard the proceedure as “ill-advised.” Why don’t “we” mind our business and let them run their affairs as they wish. Just so whet do “we” care what they do to their Jewish athletes? . . . EDNESDAY came the repereus- sion of this “critical attitude.” ‘The American Olympic Association met and substituted a resolution for the Pittsburgh note of the A.A.U. ‘The New York Times describes this A.O.A, document as “phrased more temperately, in a more conciliatery tone.” As a matter of fact, it’s a complete revocation of the threat to boycott the Games, expressing merely the pious, stupid and “ar- dent hope that before the time comes for the preparation and se- lection of the teams of the United States to compete in the Olympic Games, all disabilities affecting the rights and privileges of Jews will have been removed.” This complete emasculation of the original note was mainly the result of the activities of Brig. Gen. Charles H. Sherill by Dietrich Wortmann of the German- American A. C. Sherill admitted in just so many words “That treat- ment of Jewish athletes by. German authorities is outrageous ... and they're not getting a fair deal.” He refers to the case of the country’s outstanding tennis player. Dr. Daniel Prenn. * os “DUT,” he goes on,.and this is really the only point in his feeble ar- gument, “if en American team is prevented from taking part in the 1936 Olympics for the reason stated in this (A.A.U.) resolution, then I predict that American youths throughout the nation will be dis- gruntled that they cannot, because of the Jews, take part in those games. That will surely start an unreasoning move of anti-Semitic resentment among ail those young people that will be hard to overcome.” Thoroughly familiar with Hitler's popularity among the young people of this nation, General Sherill un- dertakes to make that statement. The day before the discussion some of the General's very ‘best friends who are Jews warned him “that if I took this stand today I would be com- ioe suicide with all American ews. “My reply yesterday and today was and is—that recently, since my residence in Turkey, I have become a great admirer of the dignity of Oriental civilization, and have come to believe that one of its most dig- nified expressions is the Japanese use of hara-kiri as a form of un- selfish protest. It would be the my Without a Soubt. . [CH WORTMANN adds that “we” with all “our” discrimination against Negroes in the Los Angeles Olympics are certainly in no position to er Protest without threat of boy- cott. ‘ The Labor Sports Union has con- sistently fought against racial dis- crimination in America and all coun- tries. It is in a position to ask for a boycott of the Berlin Games on ‘that basis-and on the basis of its com- plete identification with the cause and aims of the great workers’ athletic organizations, now driven underground but still operating in The Labor Sports Union demands the boycott. It asks for support of the Spar- takiade, which will be held next year in Moscow where racial discrimine- tion is something you read abou! The Daily Worker Tournament Joseph Freeman is writing an ac sevnt of the Wrestling Tournamen’ held Wednesday by the Daily Worke meet the “blood qualifications.” “acceptance of non-Aryan members by athletic clubs is left to the decision of the various?— = long as they're letting “us” send Jews | + Another’ clause’ states’ that and the Labor Sports Union in New York. It will appear in this column Saturday. Results follow: 126 lb. champion—A. Seltzer, Daily Worker, Runner-up—E. Zinn, Spar- tacus A. C. 135 Ib. champion—,, Sgukas, Greek Spartacus, Runner-up == J. Fink, Spartacus A. C. 147 lb. champion—J. Lekas, Greek Spartacus, Runner-up — 8S. Fisher, Harlem Progressive. ese 160 lb. champion—J. Lekas, Greek Spartacus, Runner-up—R. Nordlund, Prolets A. C. r 175 Ib, champion — "EL. Bernstein, Prospect A. C. Runner-up—J. Cox, Y.M..C. A. Heavyweight champiop—P. Kaupin- nen, Brooklyn Kaytee, Runner-1p— R. Ezell, Greek Spartacus. Helping the Daily Worker Through Ed Newhouse Contributions received to the credit of Edward Newhouse in the Socialist competition with Michael Gold, Dr. Luttinger; Helen Luke,,and Jacob Burck to raise $1,000-in the $40,000 Daily Worker Drive: N. Gilbert .. Bridge Game . Previous total Tomorrow Night! Testimonial, Banquet to MAX BEDACHT| Irving “Plaza 15th St. comicr ‘Irving Place Reservations, $1 Got Tickets at Workers Book Store 3 East 13th Strert f COHENS’S 117 ORCHARD ®TREET Nr, Delancey Street, New! York City Wholésele Opticians EYBS EXAMINED By Dr. A.Weinstoin Tel. ORchard 4-4520 ‘Optometrist Faotory on Premises CARL BRODSKY Al Kinds of INSURANCE 799 Broadway ~ .N. Y. C, STuyvesant, 9-5557 1. J. MORRIS, Inc. GENERAL HUNERAL DIRECTORS 206 SUTTER AVE. BROOKLYN Phone® | Dickens "#273 —4—5 Night Phone: Dickens 6-5369 For Intefnational Workers Order CHAIRS & TABLES TO HIRE Dayt. 9-3504 Minffésota '9-7520 American Chair Renting Co. ‘TompXinsSquare 6-913% Caucasian Restaurant KAVKAZ" Russian and Oriental Kitchen BANQUETS AND PARTIES 303 East ith Street New York City Hoffman's RESTAURANT & CAFETERIA Pitkin Corner S#ratoga Aves. Bronx Comrades! Patromise the FIRST Food Work- ers’ Industrial Union Bakery in Bronx County The Modern Bakery 691 Allerton Avenue J A Reunion of All Summer Campers of ae Nitgedaiget and Unity Will Take Paee At COUNTEE CULLEN in their territory for collection boxes. | ston Road. Hall, 1782 8th St, NBs 4 i M. KATZ Unit 26, Section 15, Communist | cinton “ave; co-op Unemploved ‘couacts | ets Nome, Ista istn ot. mt Tas Marien C AMP M. OLGIN LOUISE THOMPSON Party of this city, has mobilized its| Barker and Britton Streets; Middle Bronx | Ave, 9.W.; 902 McKinley St. a » entire membership for the tag days.| Workers Center, 3682 Third Ave, seinen Nin: BEACON, N. i “ DR. HARRY F. WARD S. ALMAZOV Its members will canvass the untt| yerriie Ave; Workers Center, 240" Colum- vine ep? ans Lee er aed fercibony, on Red Sunday, Nov. 26th, | ble si.. Seindinevian Workers Club, 8006 | | xonre: stor: Saat, ckidabh Avec 2400 DURING THANKSGIVING WEEK-END ( for funds for the “Daily.” in! ve. $ Hy 524 x ADMISSION 25¢ raised $13.47 at a house party for| ,,BORO PARK —rinuinh Workers, tome, | TiqAt gts’ ott S® M- Clarke Bhs S48 X.) nee the Daily Worker, and challenges all| “Stn BRACI Beth Bouch’ Workers olay, | Section 5 Special Program Arranged for the Four Days. : : $e | Mis nthe section to ecual its o> | ov may atts t | gtr del Me Ketkie ve: a3 N. Lavan. Concert. and Dance on Saturday Night |torts on the tae days. | BENSON URST — Bensonhurst Workers | Ave.; 3039. W. Armitage ‘Ave. ia . 14 ‘He | 1 Center, 2003. 10th at HOTEL HAS 60 ROOMS, STEAM HEAT, HOT AND COLD’ RUNNING : ENTERTAINMENT —F REI H E I T GESANG VEREIN [BIE 20.88 ns tor tne| Somer mA Sater tant wore | _i.W, aut Se dew. ion ental ge Rane ae enter, i] i. rmaid. 5) v, v Me od UKRAINIAN CHORUS—FREIHEIT MANDOLIN ORCHES Daily Worker Tag Days, Nov. 24, 26| “niditoN “nEACH Brighton Beach | 1°" W CheMS? Arcs 22a N. Artesian Ave. PRICE: $14.00 PER WEEK (INCLUDING PRESS TAX) 9. : . and 26th. Clip out the list of stations Danna Center, Brighton Beach and Coney WEST SIDE:--808 W. Van Buren St. 1806 Priv. t ¢ L Dail: at 10 30 A MM f hi ‘ 1 a island Ave, . in re. I 5 * . : in your city. Volunteer to take tag | Tiand Ave ten oy |B Racine Ave Polk end Damen. ‘ate Cars Leave ly H . M. from the 3 day boxes. Help make these three ae ae See Cooperative Restaurant, 2700 Bronx Park East Graham Ave; Bridge Plaza Workers Club, 285 Rodney St.; Laisve, 48 Ten Byck Bt.; 9298 W. Roosevelt Rd. the battle to save sour ‘SDR:4803 ‘Indiana Ave. ? | Be SSYESETS RY SN PIRRET Sev ba is ohrngtod CAO SAN LU BR Rae SN RE SES:

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