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Page Twe iL AFL Delegates Ixpress Need for )pposition Center Represent 23,000 Mem- bers; to Back Rank and File NEW YORK—Fifty epresenting 23,000 members \merican Federation of Labor xal unions and opposition Atended a Rank and File Conf yeré Saturday called by the se for Unemployment Ins te A. F.ofL. A wide range of vas represented; the biggest t ntation came from the I.L.C Mmalgamated and Bu g here were fraternal d ae Unemployed Counc Louis Weinstock, chairme the memployment Insurance Committee f the A. F. of L., made the main eport. He spoke of the need for entralizing and r ork of the rank « novement, both na’ nd locally. He stressed the need fo stablishment of centers in differen ities which will guide and link up he work of all opposition 5 vithin the A. F. of L. The drive for Unemployment In- urance at present is the main task f all the opposition groups in the \. F. of L., said Weinstock, but it nust be broadened to include the ight against injunctions, for trade nion democracy and should include Il the local issues against the AF.L. zaders. Publication of the magazine tank and File Federationist will help aaterially in the coordination and suidance, he added. The discussion after Weinstock’s eport showed the workers heartil} n favor of establishing an oppositior senter. One worker pointed out the 2somumon practice of AF.L. leaders in nisrepresenting and twisting a de- sision or action taken in another local vhen making a report in another city. The need for solidarity and support ‘or all local strike struggles was em- ahasized. John Moore, a Negro worker from the Mechanics Association supported dublication of the magazine and en- dorsed Weinstock’s main report. Delegates arose to endorse Unemploy- nent Insurance and local relief, and dledged to get their locals behind she magazine. Some locals have al- ready subscribed 100 per cent to the YRA SendsPotatoes, Bread, Milk, Soaring High Above'‘32 Level (Continued , prunes, cabb: all the staples WU Tr: , canned to- of common aacaroni, natoes, ifet. The report showed that compared with November of last year, pota- toes are now 64 per cent higher in Price, beans 39 per cent, onions 30 per cent, cabbage 39 per cent, pork chops 14 per cent. evaporated milk 43 per cent, flour 60 p-r cont, fresh ) milk 5 per cent, bread 20 per cent, i bananas 10 per cent, prunes 20 per } cent, and salmon 6 per cent. — Sugar rose 10 per 1 nd coffee showed a During thi ose from 15 tc verage rise being about 24 Farmers Don’t Pre Contrary to the conten time, per « armers do not get the benefit of the tite rises, for, as the Department of wWriculture pointed out in a re eport, it is the monopoly distrib- ting middlemen, who have reaped he large share of the rising prices. the proportion of the total selling ties now received by tho farmer is ow less than six mo; ago. These rises, some of which the the wiftest in the history of the cou ty, have been deliberately stimu. ated by the Roosevelt government 2 an effort to raise the profits of ae Manufacturers and monopoly ‘ibutors | The food increases are a uniform | eep wage cut forsthe whole working Mas6, for every working-class family _ 1.the country. |) If ft ts not to be driven down to Hi galie levels of living, the American ‘ orking class must organize resistance: |) > every increase in food prices. |) Strikes, picketing before food shops. yairies, bakeries, miust be organized, ‘Pith entire families gainet the rising cost of food Only your support can help the | Dally Worker continue, You like the ‘enlarged and improved “Daily.” | Support it with your dollars. Rush © DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY \ 107 BRISTOL STREET | Bek Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooktyn PRONE: DICKENS 2-2012 Office Hours: 8-10 AM. 1-2, 6-8 P.M. DOWNTOWN | Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-9554 | John’s Restaurant BPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES A piace with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 EB. 12th St. New York AAO | JADE MOUNTAIN { American & Chinese Resteorant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12 & 13 to Our Comrades | | a Welcome * leven less space DAILY WORKER. NEW YORK, M |WESL Wins Right to| Del Cartoon Omitted & Honor Japanese Communist Leader Due to a technical mishap, Del’s cartoon feature, “Gutters of New York,” which usually appears on this page, has been omitted from this issue. It will appear without fail tomorrow. Represent War Vets) | at Claim Hearings) Force Federal Review| . A Objection Trial for 3rd Time ,s=~ vor ‘tie sore x in Decatur Today won a signal| (Continued from Page 1) victory at the Veterans’ Adminis- | ration in New York Saturday morn- | ing. Review Board No. 6, appointed | by Roosevelt to pass on presumptive | cases, accepted Harold Hickerson, Na- |tional Secretary of the W.ES.L., as |the representative of Neketa Pase- tion of evidence will probably receive h the Norris trial. Newspapermen May Leave is doubtful whether the New newspapermen who are here ill remain over the week’ adjourn- It is also doubtful whether the L D. chief defense counsel, Samuel even make a summsa- Summations are not L, Leibowitz, will on to jury. her courts and in view of the sen- ent in Morgan County against ew lawyers from New York” and the Scottsboro boys, a verdict of uilty is almost a foregone conclusion. To make a summation would only be a waste of time and energy. Decatur is still chuckling over the way Judge Callahan overruled the |defense’s motion to quash the Jack- son County indictments against the Scottsboro boys on the grounds that systematically excluded from jury | service. | Names on Jury Forged ‘The defense proved conclusively by the testimony of John V. Haring, a nationally known handwriting expert, that the Jackson County jury rolls had been tampered with. The names of Negroes used by the defense at the trial this spring had been forged on the jury roll. The handwriting, according to the| expert, was that of Kelly Morgan, a |Jackson County jury commissioner. The names had been forged on the roll after the roll had been com- pleted. The superimposing of names over red lines which had been drawn across the pages of the jury roll, was clear even to spectators who peered n1rough Hering’s magnifying glass. In one case a letter of one of the forged names was superimposed over the writing of another name written before the Negro’s name had been forged. Nevertheless Judge Callahan held that the defense had not proved hat there was any fraud connected with the jury roll. Judge Silent on Important Point In utering his decision overruling the defense’s motion to quash the dictments, the jurist chose his words th care. When he concluded he had left out the most important part of the testimony presented by the de- fense; that of the sworn testimony of Kelly Morgan, who said that there e no red lines drawn through the roll book when he wrote in the ames of the jurors. Since the Ne- S’ names were written over the d been added since the roll Judge Callahan When Leibowitz to call his attention to it, Callahan said irritably: “My made up. I will not listen to ‘gument, City Events City Clubs Councils Change Address central executive body of the Workers Clubs will now be 33 East 20th Street. The CLUB COUNCIL was for- located at 126 Univer: ‘ night jrom 6 to 8 p. m., and on Wednes- days, from 6 to 10:30 p. m. Wa .. Dinner-Dance Thank dinner and dance, given Workers’ Ex-Service- men’s Léague, Thursday, Nov. 30, t Webster Hall, 11th Street and 3rd Ave. Proceeds for Veterans’ winter relief. Bedacht at C. P. Meeting on Sustaining Fund All sympathizers of the Commu- ist Party are urged to come to a tomorrow, 7:30 at Irving 15th St. and Irving Place, t> take up the question of a sus-| taining fund for the C. P. Max Be- Gacht, member of the Central Com- mittee, CPUSA will speak. n the record that goes to} clear that these} chnik, world war veteran. The veteran called to review his case for pension under the regula- [tions for June 16, 1933, was sup- | ported in his claim by Samuel Gold- | berg, I. L. D. attorney for the W.ES.L. The case of Pasechnik is similar to thousands of veterans roaming the streets today. He filed claim in Oc- tober, 31, 1933, and was diagnosed by the Veterans’ Bureau in November of the same year as a dementia praecox case. However, it was not until Oc- tober, 1932, that he was awarded com- pensation. Yet under the World War Veterans Act of 1924, any claimant was automatically entitled to com- pensation, really back-pay from June, 1924, A letter from the Veterans Bureau for January 4, 1924 admitted his mental disability at that time was of long duration and was presumed to have been aggravated by service. Not |having received any back pay for eight years he is now cut off fron) the miserable compensation paid him since 1932. The chairman of the Review Board at first objected to W.E.S.L. repre- sentation, on the basis that it was not a duly accredited organization. But |Hickerson pointed out that the | W.E.S.L. with a membership of over 12,000 is in a position to represent and share in the struggles for veterans’ rights. He also pointed out that all evidence of affidavits supported the veterans claim for continuance on the pension rolls. At this point Attorney Goldberg quoted the law which states that a | veteran has the right to choose his | | own representative. | He brought to the attention of the) | Board that the regulations state that | veterans be given benefit of doubt when submitting claims. This is the | government position but ore which | the ‘boards do not take seriously. | Proof that it is a hypocritical phrase may be cited from the fact that many | states show 80 per cent of the vet- erans have been dropped altogether. Every obstacle is placed in the path of the veteran seeking claims. Faced with these incontrovertible facts, the board was forced to accept the W.E.S.L. as a duly accredited representative. Heretofore the only veteran repre- senstatives allowed were the Amer- ican Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars and Disabled American Vet- erans. This precedent puts the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League in the forefront of the struggle for the veterans’ rights and demands. | LS Green, AFL. Head | Admits Growth of Unemployment (Continued from Page 1) ing railwaymen are concerned | Green even attempts to make a | virtue of the spread - the - work (spreading the misery) plan initiated by Walter C. Teagle, head of the violently anti-labor Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey. “The effort of em- ployers to keep their men at work, | even if only part time, is indicated by |union part time figures which have | shown an increase in part time work in botii October and November, The number of members on part time has risen from 20 per cent in October and | 22 per cent in November,” | aad, Saee | Green’s unemployment figures have |always been notoriously biased in |favor of the employers, being delib- jerately calculated to minimize the | impression of the extent of jobless- | ness among the American workers. | Six months ago, when even so con- servative an organization as the Na- tional Industrial Conference Board | admitted 17,000,000 unemployed, Green did not admit more than 13,000,000. His reluctant admission of growing | unemployment today, is thus, all the | more significant of the extraordinary army of jobless American workers, | (right) and Wilhelm Pieck, German | years an outstanding figure in the Joseph Stalin, Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union Communist leader, acting as pall- bearers at the funeral in Moscow recéntly of Sen Katayama, for many Japanese revolutionary movement. Katayama was a member of the Executive Committee of the Commenist International at the time of his death, DAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1083 Laundry Code to Be Heard Today Provides 14c. Hr. for Southern Workers (Daily Worker Washington Bureau) | WASHINGTON, Nov. 27.—Hearings on the code for the laundry indus- try, providing for a minimum wage of 14 cents an hour for workers in| the South, will be held tomorrow under the chairmanship of N. R. A. Deputy Administrator A. D. White- side, known to textile workers as the N. R. A. deputy for the $12 a week cotton code. When You Go to Fights ... IHERE were two notable fights in New York last week and it is just possible that you may care to read about them. In the Bronx, a dismal borough distinguished by a zoological collection, some universities and a species of cheer whose origin Most of the workers who come un-| is ascribed to the inhabitants, Tommy Loughran fought Ray der this code are Negro women. At/ Tmpellitiere and it was a stvange fight. And at the archi- Celebrate Soviet Recognition With Dollars to ‘Daily’ NEW YORK.—“I, too, want to celebrate the recognition of the Soviet Union by sending a dollar to the Daily Worker,” writes Rita Rosenberg, from Philadelphia, Pa. Dollars to celebrate the recog- nition came also from Arthur A. Sockol, Stamford, Conn.; Sol Weissman, Bertha Stein, of Phila- delphia, and from H. 8., N. Y. Paterson Strike Is; Sold Out by U. T. W., Leaders’ Agreement (Continued from Page 1) | allow the president of Princeton Uni- | versity, Dr. Howard W. Dodds, name the “impartial” chairman of the compulsory arbitration board. They | further agreed that if they have a| grievance they must give the arbitra~- | tion board sixty days notice before |’ ——————_______-_! it is considered. | is being kept in the background in The wage scale is to be “adjusted” | the negotiations in order to keep his every sixty days by the “arbitration | skirts clean before the workers. How- board,” and no doubt after the men | eVer. Keller in his speeches sup] are forced back to work the scale| the betrayal line of Schweitzer, tell- will be lowered. The claim now is | ing the workers that they must give that the wages will be five per cent | UP everything to get union recogni- more than the wages paid to silk workers in two other fields. Since} the other fields always have received | | lass pay than the Paterson fields, the | | agreement means in reality a wage! | reduction for the strikers. | | Although the statement of Greene | | was printed in the papers, the agree- | ment itself has not been made pub- | | lic, and is being kept secret. The | balloting on the agreement will take | | place Monday. The agreement was! | not read to the members of the union | until this afternoon. The crafts are to vote separately A Company Union The secret agreement gives the U.! T. W. “union recognition,” giving the dues control to the union leaders, | and at the same time makes the U, | T. W. a company union by including | the clause that the union gives up its right to strike in the future. The “arbitration board” is to include three U. T. W. leaders, three manu- facturers and one “neutral” chair- man, who will be chosen for his; friendliness to the employers. The manufacturers made it clear| in these secret. conferences, which went on for four days, that they are agreeing even to the wage scale pri Posed only to get the strikers back to work, then under the no strike | clause, they can cut wages dras- tically in 60 days. The union lead- ers have agreed to give up all wage demands and have completely be- trayed the strikers. Schweitzer, the secretary of the U. T. W. union, is pushed forward as the | main representative of the union in; the negotiations. Eli Keller, the Love- | stoneite “co-organizer” of the union, j By HOWARD BOLDT NEW YORK, N. Y. Each day demonstrating | about 1,200 unemployed workers, ail| heads of families, the majority ex-| servicemen, are made to put in from thirteen to fourteen hours of forced |labor at the Bear Mountain, | York, forced labor camp, Skilled workers, union carpenters, plumbers, j electricians and stone masons were found by the Daily Worker reporter to be working on forced labor on a state project under conditions which |the men described as unbearable and at starvation “wages.” Ragged un- employed workers are forced to work jin the open without warm clothing. | No provisions is made for shelter, and in most cases the men are not per- |Mmitted to build fires with which to warm the food which they themselves | must bring. The conditions on this forced labor project should serve as a warning to all workers to fight against the Roosevelt plan to take |4,000,000 men throughout the country |off relief and put them on wages be- jlow even the starvation minimum of |the N, R. A. | Must Pay Doctor New| New York Vets At Forced Labo Jobless in Bear Winter Cold, Witho No Warm Food, F | absence was the direct result of iN- jness in the case of the employee will be dropped from the payroll as “in- j active.” 3, Any employee who has | been dropped from the payroll as “in- active” will not be eligible for Home Relief under the rulings of the Tem- porary Emergency Relief Administra- tion of the City of New York.” This ruling, signed by J. J. Tamson, superintendent, makes it necessary for a worker when absent to spend | $3 out of his hopelessly inadequate | wages for a doctor's certificate. No excuse except the illness of the worker himself is sufficient, 4 Hours To Reach Work with the exception of fifteen or twenty on County relief are from New York City, In order to catch the special train which leaves Weehawken, N. J. {worker is handed the following set | of rules: 1, No emplo: will be per- | When starting on the job, each| at 6:05 a. m, the workers must leave their homes at 4:30 o'clock in the morning, The train arrives at Bear All the workers at Bear Mountain | tion. The broad silk strikers have con- tinued militant picketing. The po- lice have been attacking and break- ing up picket lines, arresting many workers. The negotiations were carried on direct with the manufacturers, with Greene as chairman. Mayor Hinch- chiffe withdrew when Schweitzer and Keller were unable to prevent the/| strike committee from distributing a leaflet this week, which branded Hinchcliffe as a strikebreaker. The manufacturers privately made it clear to the U. T. W. leaders that in return for union recognition they will hammer wages down in 60 days to $1.60, to $1.70 for 100,000 picks, a drastic wage reduction. The National Textile Workers’ Union has called on the strikers to reject this strikebreaking agreement of the U. T. W. leaders and continue the strike, demanding the $25 mini- mum raote. The N, T. W. U. declares: “First we must vote down this rotten agree- ment. Then we must elect a shop committee in every shop to represent all the workers of each shop. Next we must establish a Paterson Silk and Dye Workers’ Shop Delegates Council. “Members of the Associated Silk! Kick out the whole Schweitzer out- fit, and take the situation into your own hands! Silk workers! Defend your right to organize into a union of your own choice! Defend your right to control your own union! Defend your right to strike against low wages and bad conditions! Vote down the slavery agreement!” Mountain “Chain Gang,” in| ut Clothes, Allowed ired When Absent jor to pravide warm dry clothing for winter work, They must eat a cold |lunch which they themselves bring, jafter working all day in the open, |in many cases not even being allowed to build fire with which to warm cof- fee. On Aug, 25, 1933, there was an issue of blue cotton shirts, overalls, cotton socks and underwear, With winter coming on there has been no subsequent issue of warm winter | clothing. This is a special grievance among the men since in most in- stances they are forced to work with- | out overcoats on the job. | On the job the men are subject to | the speed-up systems instituted by their respective sub-foremen, certain of the foremen even attempting to establish production rates, In one case @ worker reported, the foreman }of a “chain gang” (as the workers call certain of the sections, because r 14 Hours Daily mitted to absent himself from work | Mountain station at 7:30, where bus-|of the continuous hard work break- during his regular working period for | ses are waiting to take the men to|ig and drilling the rock established more than two full days without| their jobs, In many cases the work-|the rule that all operators of hand |presenting a doctor's certificate show- | ling that such absence was due to! illness, sent for more than two full days and fails to present such proof that such | ers must climb one 0° two miles up the mountain to their places of work, 2. Any employee who is ab-/in this way putting im four hours |action of the men in drilling only before starting work. Absolutely no provision is made at | | drills must drill twelve feet per day. This rule was broken by the united | |four feet. | ing construction, road construction, and the clearing of the land and woods. When interviewed by the | “Daily Worker” correspondent, J. J. | Tamson, superintendent said that thirty-nine buildings had been erected ~ | by the men, “These buildings,” Tam- | ; Bear Mountain to feed these work-|son, said, “have been built entirely | )ers, to provide shelter in case of rain,| by the men on Temporary Emergency | Plumbing, painting, electrical | Relief. wiring, everything has been done by these men.” When asked if skilled workers received union wages for this work, Tamson replied that all the workers received the basic wage rate of $4.50 per day minus 50c for trans- portation. Of course,” Tamson added, “We encourage each worker when he comes here to do that work at which he is experienced.” Skilled workers on the job include stone masons, carpenters, painters, elec- tricians, plasterers, plumbers, machi- nists, etc, The transportation charge of fifty cents is also deducted from their pay on days that they do not report for work, The principle road work is the con- struction of the Perkins Memorial Drive, named in honor of George W. Perkins, former partner of J. P. Mor- gan and friend of Theodore Roose- velt. In order to rush the construc- tion of this road that it may be used by tourists and vacationists next summer, the men are being worked at the highest point of the drive in the teeth of a biting North wind, with the temperature at 12 degrees The project is divided into build-| above zero 14 cents an hour, a woman working the full 45 hours permitted under the code would make exactly $6.30 a week. And if she worked steadily all year she would receive $327.60. ‘The “Southern Group” listed in the code includes the following states: Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina, Kentucky, Maryland, the District of Columbia, Oklahoma, Texas, Florida, South Carolina, Geor- gia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, ‘Tennessee and Arkansas. The “North- ern Group” includes all other states. Edison Employes to Push Fight in Court NEW YORK.— Plans to continue their struggle against the powerful Edison Co. through the courts, despite previous decisions favoring the com- ‘any were announced last week by the attorney of the Brotherhood of Edison Employes, an independent union of Edison workers. On Wednesday the Edison Co. car- ried through a referendum to deter- mine Nerang are ee ready to join lependent or the company union plan which it proposed, known as the Association of Edison Employees. Both the com~- pany and the union officials declare in advance of any count that the vote will indicate a majority for the oan ny plan. Coercion and every form Ly intimidation was practised by the company before the balloting. No tellers were permitted from the Brotherhood. The attorney for the Brotherhood declared yesterday that he would go to the courts to declare the decision to join the company union invalid. Previous attempts of the Brotherhood to get an injunction restraining the company from interfering with their organization had failed. A temporary injunction was granted, but later | rescinded, with both parties agreeing | to this decision. NRA Board Set Up to Outlaw Strikes on Forced Labor Jobs (Continued from Page 1) | wages and bad working conditions on forced labor jobs. Many of these workers are skilled and semi-skilled. The fact that the A. F. of L. officials are co-operating with every move of Roosevelt in creating a cheap supply |of non-union forced labor denced again by the selection of James Wilson of Cincinnati, long an | A. F. L. official, as one member of the board of three. Another million dollars of the Civil Works’ Funds, which Roosevelt an- | nounced would go to the unemployed, has now been put into war work. This money will employ at the most enly 2,371 men, it is admitted by the | civil works administration. The war building for which funds will be given, instead of going to the unem- | ployed, includes: sea coast defenses |near New York City, $203,000, em- ploying only 402 men; Fort Ji 7 380, employing only 89 men; Slocum, $18,611, employing 50 men; Fort Totten, $47,760, empioying 108 men; Fort Wadsworth, $58,900, with 130 men; West Point, $169,600, with 485 men, etc. It is not stated how long the men will be employed on these war prep- aration projects. sizes the immediate need for building rank and file committees on all forced labor jobs to demand union wages and working conditions. The Council also called on all organizations to elect delegates to the National Unemployed Convention taking place in Wash- ington, D. C., on Jan. 13, 14 and 15, evi- | The Unemployed Council! empha- | | | | tecturally remarkable Madison the Cuban, stood up against a furious Tony Canzoneri for one and five-sixths atavistic rounds. You have read about Impellittiere. His manager, Herry Lenny, has done ® pretty publicity job on the ape who has been accurately described as an “enormous Pithecanthrope with matted black fur on his chest and the pumiled ingenious face of a Princeton freshmen who has been asked a classroom question that he cannot answer.” He weighs 255, is taller than Carnera and has four inches in reach on the Pisa Punk. Five years ago Loughran was @ clean-cut young light-heavy, mild- mannered and effective. He was as nearly handsome a light-heavy as I've seen and he was so affable and modest, he would have been a great idol if he’d had a punch. He still had eyebrows and his hair was slickly parted and he went along winning fights and the light- heavyweight championship. MAS LOUGHRAN gave up his crown and started on starchy foods and carbohydrates and be- came an overstuffed heavy, about 187, and had his ups and downs in the division. Whenever he lost a bout, he would lay off for a while and Embark on a Comeback Cam- paign. He had just beaten Jack Sharkey, and, to show his good in- tentions, he signed for Impellittiere, an Unknown Quantity, with bold emphasis on the Quantity. Imp had been a carnivore of over 300 pounds, but Harry Lenny, the ex- middleweight, took him under his Bullitt Leaves for Moscow Wednesday Reports Progress on Debt Negotiations WARM SPRINGS, Ga., Nov. 25.— William G. Bullitt, first American Ambassador to the U. 8S. 8S. R., will Jeave for Moscow on the steamship President Harding this Wednesday, it ‘was announced by President Roose- velt, who is vacating here. Prior to the announcement, Mr. Bullitt presented to the President a detailed report on the progress of the debt negotiations going on in Wash- ington between American representa- tives and those of the U. S. 8. R. These negotiations sre considered progressing satisfactorily. According to the President’s an- nouncement, Mr. Bullitt is to make a study of the problem of establishing permanent housing for the embassy in Moscow, after which he is to return as soon as is practical to report on this problem to the President and to organize the embassy staffs. Square Garden Kid Chocolate, ( Se ES RNa Sea wing and trained him down and tried assiduously to curb his oafish few creditable rounds. In the sixth Loughran was caught with a scrap- ing right uppercut, which split the skin on the left side of the mouth, | and thin, gory trails began | down his chin and chest. Impel’s glove smeared and labored, and the smaller man's face was 8 desperate, tragic mask, a morbid travesty on the face of Loughran, the light-heavy. Referee Hartley stepped in and stopped it, giving the fight to Impellittiere on a technical knockout. Tommy was bloody, but still strong, and he protested vio- lently and pushed Hartley around and swings at the immobile giant and turned with a coolness born of desperation to General Phelan, the Boxing Commissioner, who was waving his arms at the ringside, shouting to Hartley. Papers | ROR two rounds and ten minutes the laughter and martial music and fel- ine ecstasies. And when his seconds helped him to his feet Kid Choco- late cried and, groping across the ring to shake hands with the jubilant Tony, tears streamed sparkling down his cheeks. This may be writing of a peculiarly ineffectual sort, but I’m letting it stand because it is not good to mull over those scenes much if one liker j to think straight. 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: Wrestling Match . H. Sidney Unit 2, Sec. 2 New York ... : Previous total ......ss.seeeee0 180.56 Total to date $279.06 All Comrades Mest at the NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Fresh Food—Proleterian Priees 5. 18TH ST., WORKERS’ CENTER——— | | Chairman CORLISS LAMONT FRIENDS OF THE HERBERT GOLDFRANK —Speakers—— IET UNION AND THE ICOR || MASS VICTORY RECOGNITION MEETING Wednesday, November 29th, 8 P. M. BRONX COLISEUM NEW DUNCAN DANCERS EAST 177th STREET Mignon, Sophia, Ruth, Julia, Minna, Hortense (assisted by a group of 20) Recognition Cycle to Soviet Music CARL BRODSKY DR. HARRY F. WARD M. KATS ENTERTAINMENT —F REI H EI T GESANG VEREIN | W. I. R. BAND — FREIHEIT MANDOLIN ORCHESTRA ) i