The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 28, 1933, Page 2

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Page Two A.F.L. CARPENTERS STORM Shipyards Strike Is|°77™"5 OF NEW York DISTRICT COUNCIL IN BIG ~ REVOLT AGA Membership of 17 Local Officials; Trial Commi INST MACHINE s in Movement to Oust | ttee to Speed Action; Will Hear Members’ Grievances DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1933 Broken by A. F. of L.' Offcials and N.R.A. NEW YORK.—Several hundred shipyards workers, embittered by the sell-out settlement effected by the A. F. of L. officials with the National Labor Board last Friday, marched on Fletcher Drydocks yesterday, and] | compelled the company to re-hire} them and pay off the strikebreakers. The militant action of the drydock workers followed after the brief an-| nouncement made at a. half hour NEW YORK.—With the entire membership of 17 local unions affiliated | Sttike meeting Saturday by A. F. of with the A. F. of L. Carpenters’ Di: strict Council in revolt against the | dutchinson-Hansen machine, the first steps in the direction of ousting them vas taken yesterday when an elected ank and filers marched to the Counc m trial, On their arrival at head-« uarters, they found the Council of- doors i flanked on icials barricaded be! 1 their inner offices Il sides by police The carpenters packed the \eadquarters and massed outsi closec wuilding while the trial com net and took action. Ou he failure of Officials r heir charges, a member of the com nittee proposed that they remain in he headquarters and take possessior ince that would entitle them to con- rol. There was considerable confu- fon among the workers buta deci- jon was made to continue the fight wainst the officals until the end. The arpentets left the building and pro- eded to Irving Plaza where they leld a meeting. ‘The trial committee has appealed 0 all members of the union and ex- members dropped from the union to sppear before it and present evidence if grievances against the officials of he’ District Council. The trial is to | ve held in two weeks Sentiment is spreading among the members to establish real trade union democracy, to change the by-laws and to elect a slate of officials who will | Qe compelled to submit all decisions to referendum vote. The referendum vote is becoming a burning demand to the carpenters. Many are calling for immediate stoppage of payment of the tax to the District Council. The revolt which is sweeping the union like wildfire was characterized by an old time member of the union, yesterday as the greatest wish of the members for the past 17 years. The work of ousting the Hutchinson- Wanson mechine must be complete, he declared. Action of the trial committee fol- lowed a meeting of 2500 members called by Carpenters’ Local 2725. at New Star Casino, Saturday at which representatives of the 16 other locals were present. The revolt started with the exposure of Young, a Council of- ficial who had been closely tied up with the by which workers were forced to turn over from 30 to 50 per cent of their union wages to the masses. The Rank and File Committee Against Racketeering was instru- mental in bringing much of this racket in the building trade to light. | Shoe Shop Delegate committee of 11 surrounded by 300 il headquarters to place the officials Vote Strike Support Four Framed-up Mem- bers Released on Bail NEW YORK.—Approximately 400 | shop delegates from 84 shoe shops | heard a report on the strike at a| shop delegates’ Council meeting of | the Shoe and Leather Workers In- | dustrial Union on Saturday and voted | full support to the shops which con- tinue out on strike. The shop delegates voted a five per | assessment on every working aber of the union to establish a | strong strike fund. The Shop Del- | egates’ Council will be organized on | a firmer basis at its next meeting on | Dec. 14 during which time the shops are to meet and elect delegates. | The New England Committee sent | by the Provisional Committee for the | amalgamation of all shoe unions was | greeted with cheers and applause by the delegates. A committee of 29 was elected to meet with the Executive Board of the union and work out proposals and a program for the com- amalgamation convention De- cember llth in Boston. Three of the four union organizers | who had been imprisoned ir a Jersey | City jail on framed up charges were | released on Saturday and were round- ly cheered by the membership. Mag- licano made a short speech. Duchin and Medoxin were also present. A. Tvanoff was released yesterday. The fow tkers were released on bail of $1,000 each pending appal. Cutters Hit Forward Slander as Cover for ILGW Strikebreaking NEW YORK. — Repudiating the slanderous charges of the Jewish Daily Forward that they were scab- bing while other workers of the Paris | Maid Dress Co. were on strike, 14| cutters, members of the Industrial | Union, in a signed statement today declared that there was no strike at | the shop at any time when they were | L. officials that thi d accepted the | National Labor Board’s decision to send the men back to work. Not a single demand was won in the strike, not even that of recognition. The strike was broken by the officials after having delayed action for weeks, per- mitting thousands of scabs to be em- ployed, and weakening the morale of the men, to compel them to accept any decision. While terms of the decision are supposed to provide against discrimi- | nation, the companies yesterday post- | ed signs that the present staff, that is, | the scabs will be retained. The Steel and Metal Workers’ Union, in a statement today, called | on the shipyards workers not to give | up the fight, but to organize rank | and file dock committees on each} shipyard representing all the trades} and without interference by the com- Pany or its agents, The dock com- mittees should see to it that scabs | are driven out and strikers taken on | the jobs and that meetings are held | conditions to be demanded and all | —by del Re-elected! NEWS ITEM: “La Guardia is Roosevelt's Civic Works Program.” | Schenectady to Fulton to Rockaway, | to wind up with a big mass meeting |in Brooklyn Palace. very enthusiastic over President’s NEWS ITEM: “Ten thousand shabby jobless stand ali night before Civie Works Office. Few get jobs.” (The above cartoon was first printed on the day after LaGuardia’s election as Mayor of New York.) grievances be taken up. The Indus- trial Union urges the workers to drive the Prendergasts and Mellons from their ranks and elect sincere militant workers as officials. It pledges its cooperation as in the past, in the forthcoming struggles of the workers, Terzani’s Main Appear in Court. Prosecutor Gets Delay to “Induce” Art Smith to Come | Jean Rollins .... | for cartoons: Helping the Daily Worker through Del: Louis Elion, collected from taxi Markowita drivers, N. Y. C. 5 Tom Mooney Branch, L L. D.; bids | so eeeeeseeseueses eee ee $8.00 | J. Jonocsik = 2,00 | 1.00 | . 150} 50) Friend of the Daiiy Worker. 50 | 25.00 | 28.70 | 20 | Units 8 and 28 party .. Previously recorded .. TOTAL _ Accuser Fails to PATTERSON FACES ALL-WHITE JURY (Continued from Page 1) { Out of a panel of 100 grimly smiling | NEW YORK.—The trial of Athos | prospective jurors, only four ask to be Terzani, framed in connection with | excused. All the others seem anxious | the killing of his anti-fascist com- | to sit in judgment on the jlads. Alabama picks its juries rade, Anthony Fiero, was postponed yesterday until Dec. 11 at the re- quest of the prosecution “because | procedure is to call twelve men. The it was unable to produce” the main | prosecution walks up and down and| | nine Negro} ‘striking” names not wanted. The| accuser against Terzani—Command- | points to a man, calling “strike.” This | ‘28 ® isha, Sg er Art Smith of the fascist Khaki! means he does not want him. For| ¥eryone scems to realize it. \Shirts. Assistant Attorney Charles | every State “strike,” the defense is| P. Sullivan told the court that Smith | entitled to two. So on down the line, | had refused to come to testify. He| until twelve are left out o? the hun-| asked for time in which to get|dred. These twelve make the jury. Smith to possible.” Five members of a labor jurq,| which will total nine, @s many labor organizations, appear “by whatever means | said they had no fixed opinion which couldn’t be changed no matter what fi hone representing | the evidence showed. Two more were | been informed by phone t were | excused because they are opposed to From the first twelve called, five | at work. The Forward attack is a present at the hearing, and will at-| capital punishment. To the five left, Nightingale 4-3834 DR. J. JOSEPHSON Surgeon Dentist Formerly with the I. W. 0. 207 East lith Street New York City (near Third Avenue) cover for the activities of the A. F. of L. dress officials who have threat- ened the cutters with loss of jobs unless they join their union. Local 10, the cutters state, have since tried to get them to join the local again but they have refused and have thrown a committee of the I. L. tend the trial, if “General” Smith | Joseph Brodsky asks if they would be- can be prevailed upon* to testify. lieve a white man’s word against a Afterward, they will render their Negro’s word. Judge Callahan refuses own verdict. The labor jurors who|to allow this question, also barring! attended were: Samuel Krinsky Of | the question if the jurors felt any | Philadelphia, representing the Amal- jgamated Clothing Workers of Amer- | ica; Meyer Abramson of the United Hebrew Trades; Rachel Stone, of the against Wade Wright, Morgan County | | prosecutor, | resentment at the criticism levelled| Price, dressed in blue, who made the “Jew| G. W. out of the shop. “The cutters were at no time in- med about any strikes going on t the jobber, the statement says. ge Trade Union All the cutters know was that the officials of Local 10 were negotiating Directory @ 4 47) with the bosses of the Paris Maid| Dress Co. to compel the cutters to) CLEANERS, DYERS AND PRESSERS UNION BB Second Avenue, New York City Algonguin 4-$267 FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 4 West 18th Street, New York City Chelsea 3-0505 FURNITURE WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 346 Broadway, New York City Gramercy, 5-89) MBVAL WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 4S East 19th Street, New York City Gramercy 7-734 join Local 10. In this they succeeded. | Surely not because any of the cutters were scabbing. ADVERTISEMENT New Rates. in Camp Nitgedaiget | money” speech in the last trial. | -W.W.; 5 at q | pet : SEE oan From the second dozen prospective | Pocketbook Workers Union, and Frank Wedl, of the Brotherhood of Painters, Paperhangers, and Deco-| rators, Local 499. | Other organizations which will be | represented on the labor jury are: | The International Ladies Garment Workers Union, the United Brother- hood of Carpenters and Journey- men; the Trade Union Unity League, and New York locals of the Amal-| gamated Clothing Workers of | jurors examined, three admitted hay- ing fixed opinions on the case and one stated opposition to capital pun- | ishment. Both Leibowitz and Brodsky in their questions to prospective jurors constantly emphasized the effect of Wade Wright's inflamatory speech at the last trial. Prospective jurors ad- mit discussing the case, but deny they have been influenced. America, | eee | Leibowitz asks a perspective juror: Birmingham Meet “Have you any opinion of the guilt or innocence of this defendant?” Callahan intervened “He needn’t answer question.” Leibowitz protested (eT —— en TE NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION IO West 28th Street, New York City Lackawanna 4-4010 T AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Nese Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. ¥. FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE Welcome Wiltiamsbargh Comrades De Luxe Cafeteria ‘% Graham Ave.. Cor. Siegel St. EVERY BITE A DELIGHT DOWNTOWN | Tompkins Square 6-9192 _ Caucasian Restaurant “KAVKAZ” Russian and Oriental Kitchen BANQUETS AND PARTIES Sa East 14th Street New York City BERMAE’ Cafeteria and Bar 809 BROADWAY Between ith and 12th Streets In 1932 when the cost of living was reduced and the wages of the vorkers were cut, our proletarian camps were the first to reduce the rates from $16.00 to $12.00 per week. The new rate was made on a non- profitable basis to enable the thous- ands of workers to spend their va- cations in our camps ation now is quite re- the past six months, the New Deal increased the cost oi living, particularly of food products. In comparison to last year food prices increased at least 20 per cent, and in some instances more. Faced with these conditions, the Camp Committee postponed the ne- cessary increase of rates to meet y situation as long as pos- Comrades, we now find it impos. sible, if we are to maintain our camp, to continue on the old rate. Therefore, we are compelled to raise the minimum of $1.00 per week, which brings the rates to $14.00 including tax. Rates for I. W. O. members bring- ing a letter signed by branch sec- retaries are $13.00 including tax. ‘We can also accomodate those who are in need of special diets during tthe winter season CAMP NITGEDAIGET Beacon, New York. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves, Brooklyn PRONE: DICKENS 2-3018 Office Mours: 8-10 AM, 1-8, 6-8 PM. PEOPLE’ 2457 BENEFIT a CONCERT AND DANCE Saturday Night, December 2nd ADMISSION 30c; WITH PLUGGER 25 S AUDITORIUM W. Chicago Avenue DAILY WORKER that he “asked if he had fixed opin- ion.” “We are wasting time,” replied | Demands Release of Judge Callahan, “Let's get moving.” Scotishore Boys | src ws. ee not recorded by the cout reporter. (Continued from Page 1) From the third batch, five an- — nounced opposition to capital punish- the frame-up of the Scottsboro boys | ment and five admitted having fixed and of the lynch preparations in | opinions. The prosecution chal- | Decatur against the boys and their |lenged all those opposed to capital defenders, punishment, showing its intention to The meeting unanimously adopted | demand the death penalty. Those @ resolution demanding a change of | with fixed opinions, looked Leibowitz venue from lynch-infested Decatur, grimly, in the face, announcing quashing of the indictment returned | loudly by a grand jury from whieh Ne-| “Nothing can make me change my groes were excluded, and the release | mind. I have read about the case in of the Scottsboro lads. Other reso-| the papers.” lutions were passed demanding the| Leibowitz asked a prospective juror release of Herndon and the Cham-|ihe usual question about Wade bers County croppers, and a halt to| Wright, when Judge Callahan inter- the lynch waye and police terror. rupted him irritably: “I think we've The audience pledged redoubled | had enough of that. Why popularize support to the International Labor | him?” Defense and vigorously applauded| From a fourth batch, four admitted the program of the League of Siriig- | fixed opinions, two opposed capital \gle for Negro Rights, which was pre- | punishment, one said he would not sented by Ben Davis, who also re-|ccnvict on circumstantial evidence. ported on the results of the Eastern | Judge Callahan thereupon asked him Anti-Lynching Conference held re-|if he knows what it means. The cently in Baltimore. In an atmos- | juror answers no. Callahan explains: phere of militant enthusiasm, the| “If you walk in a field, find ears audience further pledged to carry on |‘of corn chewed, and the only tracks \the fight for the rights of the Negro round that of hogs, would you find people in the heart of the lynch | the hogs did it?” ‘country, for the| freedom of the} “I would think so, but T wouldn't Scottsboro boys, the smashing of the | know it,” the juror replied, The lynch terror and the building of a|court room laughed. Callahan con. mighty League of Struggle for Ne- | tinues: |gro Rights as a prerequisite to final| “Suppose you were locked in a jvictory over the landlords, their | dark house for a long time and lost courts and agents. track of day or night. A man comes in and says there is no cloud in the sky. Another says it is noon, Would | you need more evidence that the sun was shining?” “I'd take his word for it.” “Well, that’s circumstantial evi- dence.” The fifth batch included the re- mainder of the venire. Two opposed capital punishment, one admitted having @ fixed opinion, one declared against circumstantial evidence. After four and a half hours wherein | 63 prospective jurors were excused from the panel of 100, “striking” for jury was resumed at 2 o'clock. Out of panel, 36 were excused for illness Meeting on Scottsboro Sadie Van Veen, Otto Hall, and other prominent speakers will speak on the Scottsboro trial at a mass meeting tomorrow, at 8:30, at 489 E. 169th St. Auspices of Nat Turner | Branch, ILD. and Unit 2. ‘WILLIAM BELL orrictat Optometrist OF TRE LW. 0. ishment. Fifteen minute recess granted to called from an almost filled court | decide whom io “strike” off the panel. |Yoom. The prospective jurors line up | 4 | before Judge Callahan. Men in over-| picked, there is a sense of tension in | alls, store suits, bespectacled, marked | the court room. Wright calls “strike” by lined faces and gnarled hands. | Now that the jury is about to b and Brodsky cails “two strikes” for the defense for each one for the pro- secution. “State strikes number eight,” calls Wright loudly. “Defense strikes numbers four and sixty-two,” Brodsky returns. Numbers being cailed. Tension and drama increase, for upon the remain- ing numbers the boy’s life hinges, and “Number four,” Brodsky calls. It is the last strike. The jury to | try Patterson has been picked. | Just as Judge Callahan declared the court ready to order for “strik, ing” for jury, Leibowitz declared: “Defense hot ready. I have just i the tes- be timony of Ruby Bates cannot taken before Wednesday and ex to receive doctors’ certificate to this effect and file it for record.” Callahan retorted: “We'll go with the case anyway.” | While this was occurring, Victoria with a new! hat and a dangling veil and chewing gum methodically, walked in, creat- ing a stir in the court. The selection of the jury was com- pleted at 2.55. It consists of nine farmers, one merchant, one truck driver and one painter. The jury follows: Hickory Bridges, | Danville, farmer; Elbert Conn, Eva, farmer; Gladstone G. Isley, Hartzelle, farmer; Edward E. Nelson, Decatur, | truck driver; Avery Roberts, Decatur, painter; Claude J. Roberts, Somer- ville, farmer; John H. Russell, Deca- tur, farmer; John Halbrooks, Somer- ville, farmer; Homer Johnson, Somer- ville, farmer; Titchler Johnston, Somerville, farmer; Floyd H. Lyle, Somerville, farmer; Homer Summer- | ford, Falkville, merchant. Immediately after the selection of the jury, the defense set up on a board an exact replica of the freight train on which the aleged attack occurred. All witnesses were sent to witness rooms. The courtroom filled up, with about 100 downstair kept out by the rope stretched across the stairway. “State's first witness,” Callahan | called iritably when the train was set up. i ‘Wade Wright, of the “Northern Jew Lawyer” speech in a voice not quite bellowing as at the spring trial, read the accusation against Patter- son. Victoria Price Memorized Her Part Knight then called Victoria Price. legs crossed, & merry-widow veil over the upper part of her face, she re- terson and the other boys. Her story of the alleged rape was she used at the trial this spring. It seemed 2s though she had memo- rized a part and repeated said an- swers in response to Brodsky's ques- tions. Upon cross-examination she testi- fied that she had been married twice, but could not remember the dates or the year. Her second hus- band’s name was McClendon, she said. Judge Protects Victoria Price “Is your name McClendon nov?” Liebowitz asked. “IT never used that name.” “Are you divorced from McLen- don?” Callahan interrupted by telling her that she did not have to answer that question. Each time Liebowitz tried to probe into her past life, Callahan shut him up. Eyen when Liebowitz offered to tell what he wanted to prove by his questioning, Callahan did not listen. The judge grew more irritable with the de- fense counsel as he probed deeper into her story, Victoria admitted jrunning around with Jack ‘Teller, a married man, Caliahan did not per- imit Liebowitz to probe into Vic- toria’s sexual life immediately pre- ceding the alleged attack, though the defense pleaded that it was es- sential for them to show that Vic- and othet reasons, and $2 for cause. | Of the 92, nineteen hed fixed opinions ' and 13 weve oppesed to capital pun- ins EAST 14TH STREET Near Fourth Ave. ™. ¥. ©. Phone, Tompkins Square 6-#237 toria had had inte::ourse with boy ifriends immediately before the al- leged rape is determined to Brownsville Will Stage Scotishoro Parade Wednesday | | NEW YORK—The working class| | organizations of Brownsville are pre- | paring to participate in full force in the great Scottsboro demonstration, which will take place this Wednesday, November 29, 1933, at 7 p. m. The Councils of Working Class Women have changed their regular | meeting night, in order to have their| |full membership participate in the|]etic” club and I’ve written | demonstration. Every branch of the | | 4 | I.W.O, at their meetings last Friday, | decided to participate in this dem- j Onstration 100 per cent. The League jof Struggle for Negro Rights and all} | branches of the International Labor Defense are working actively in prep- ration for this demonstration and | parade. | The Communist Party Section No. |8 is actively engaged in rallying its |membership and through its leader- | ship in mass organizations for a mass turn out to this demon: i pieced together. athletic and the social. rule the strength stood about because most of the boys were either on the indoor baseball or basketball | teams. What the smaller faction power and influence. It was on the | The demonst .j8| basis of their representations that arranged under the auspices of the! the use of the clubroom at the local jInternational Labor Defense and Tammany Hall was secured and maintained. The eighty-odd dollars in the treasury were also accounted for by @ dance and beer party ar- ranged by the “socials.” They are all Irish Catholic and R vay and| Ltalian Catholic boys and most of ockaway and/ them go to the same church and | Somehow the difficulties were al- ways ironed out. The socials re- sented the fact that baseball and basketball equipment had to be bought by the earnings of their af- fairs, but they realized the affairs | League of Struggle for Negro Rights. The route of the parade: From | Hopkinson and Pitkin to Saratoga to Dean to Ralph to Herkimer to Fulton Sts. ILGWH Clinue Puts Left Wing Leaders, Of Local 9 on ‘Trial’ NEW YORK harged with “dis- | loyalty” to the official clique of the| International Ladies’ Garment Work- ers’ Union, the left wing administr: tion elected by an overwhelmi ority of members of Cloa’ Local 9 have been placed on trial be- fore the corrupt ocfficialdom. | Having failed to remove them fi fice by Fa) r tactics, the clique| oust them by a farc- ical trial in which they can wash their acts of tre agri the membership and cover up their high-handed bureaucrats methods. The trial which has been on for a week has consisted chiefly of charges | made by Max Schwartz a deposed! Local 9 official. The left wing leaders | for the co-operation of the athletes. In the heat of a close game every- body was temporarily loyal. gear Sika NLY four or five of the whole crowd hold jobs. Theirs is the generation which never did get | even the seasonal chance to enter | industry: Social units like the fac- tery or the section gang are vague concepts to them; next to impor- tance to their families, it was this club around which their lives revolved. In the past years only one of them has lated from the orbit: George Casey, whose prog- ress from petty larceny to the road, t| then back to A. & P. peonage, I wrote up in the Daily Worker of Aug. 22, The club was a nataral outcome of the boys’ interests and geo- graphic distribution and it was formed on their own initiative. They had no clubrcom and had to meet in back of the barber shop owned by one of the parents, si when a ward lientenant offered to are charged with having staged dem-| as onstrations against the N.R.A., ing united with the Needle Tr: Workers’ Industrial Union in a d mand for unity in strikes and as| help the loose organization by sup- having charged the corrupt official! plying a meeting place his proposal clique with racketeer! | was met with enthusiasm. The il take the} mame “Tigers” was adopted before The left wing leader stand on Wednes ‘ the Tammany connection and Solely for connotations of ferocity. Here were a score of prosnective voters and Tammany was working the old formula. Three of them had already gone to the polls in the last mayoralty election and one voted for Robert Minor although his action Five Jailed as Police ‘Attack Boston Anti- OR Sdward Yauhouse | How the Tigers Bust Up Y A MAJORITY of 11 to 8 the Nelson Ave. Tigers have voted to disband. They are my neighborhood “Social and Ath- several pieces about them. | poolroom and the two candy stores in the block are seething with post mortem intrigue and that is how most of this was lacked numerically they made up in| was talking about | | | | | | | | | | would not have showed profit if not| own accord. | around, | faulted @ game and that caused an- The eThere have always been two factions in the group, the As a? toward the “community chest” for Thanksgiving baskets, the same to 15 to 4 in favor of the athletic} be “donated” in the name of Tam- many Hall, He spoke of the starving kiddies so touchingly, the boys forget he their own brothers and sisters. It was only after he left that Johnny Madigan stood up and said the guy had a nerve taking the money without their permission, and he was pull- ing down a couple ef hundred a week; why didn’t he send the bask- ets? Johnny spoke at length and worked himself into what he re- ports as “quite a lather” and ended by “slapping down” the treasurer, although what he should have done is “spit down his lousy throat and charge him for a soda,” + eo | eects of the athletes had to be ejected and the rest left of their The “social” treasurer felt that if he was to reside in the neighborhood returning the money would be an immediate hygienic con- sideration, and the next day he fessed up and said he still had the eighty-odd dollars and if the fellows wanted it back it was okay with him. | So they met again in back of the barber shop and they split it tp into shares of $3.87. There is so much bad feeling the basketball team de- other wave of demoralization. Madi- gan and Casey, the boy who voted for Robert Minor, are trying to get them together again and maybe they wall affiliate to the Labor Sports Union if we work it right. Both Madigan and Casey were to the La- bor Sports Union wrestling meet last week and they liked it fine. 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: United Front Supporters Previous total + 279.06 = $517.70 Total to date .. OUT OF TOWN on | Nazi Demonstration (Continued from Page 1) | may have been the result of a tem- porary power of a remarkable and tyrannical | priest whom I've yet to meet is so, great seemed just a superfluous Tammany | personal influence. The} [AFFAIRS in the others that the club} FOR TRE nefghborhood, with new speakers ris- | | ing to address them every few blocks. | | They returned continually to ‘ie hall, tentacle, a safety measure. Of course “Ged” does not revresent the | active personal force it signifies for Daily, Worker Sitting in the witness chair here, | peated the accusations against Pat- | told in almost the identical words | | finally parading through the Tremont Street theatre district. The entire action lasted about three hours. fully informed that the cops’ hors2s} had “slipped.” Inside the hall Roger Baldwin andj other liberals continued to rise in de- | fense of the Nazi's right to speak in| the leaflets of the Nazi letter first published in the Daily Worker were distributed. The demonstration, in which the| Jewish War Veterans as well as many local working class groups particip- ated prominently, marked the cul-| mination of a week of the greatest mass protest demanding the cancel- lation of the date set for the Nazi speaker. N. Sparks, district organizer of the Communist Party in Boston, {| will speak at the LL.D. banquet at International Hall this Wednesday on “The Lessors of the Anti-Noazi Demonstration.” a job in some other town, the spell Several policemen were toppled| of the priest would snap; still, it) 5‘ horses by the |has held them back so far. The| pe de wh at the | boys’ Tammany-church tie-up has| Bve. given by a group of later, reporters were care-| been curiously affected by the Sympathizers of Cincinnati O'Brien debacle. Tammany candidate has tremen- | dously weakened their Faith. oO eles certrinly indicates a loosening grip. their parents and the moment the| old world family ties were broken by! Cincinnati, Ohio Noy. 29th: The defeat of the |[ lark St., at 8:39 p.m. Cleveland, Ohio 30th: Concert and Dance given by the Russian, Ukranian and Slovak [ARD politicians have a tradition! of strategy that seldom allows| ragga Fe Spel encase for tactical errors, But they hap-| Workers" Grasntzeti indicated its reaction to the Nazi|PeM, and when they do the safety) burn Ave. Concert from 5 to 8 rofessor, ; a "| devices are usually sufficiently elab- ing afterwards. PyBoth in and outside of the han| Tate to assure vltimate victory. The | voluntary disbanding of an organiza- tion like the Nelson Avenue Tigers SAM & FRANK Trucking and Moving 436 East 13th Street New York Special Low Rates for Daily Worker | Well, there were eighty-odd dol- | lars in the treasury and the boys felt the basketball team ought to | cet new uniforms. They supplied | the'r own sneakers, but the shirts | were all torn and the subs had no | | | | | if | | | | trunks. They voted the uniforms, but the treasurer, who was 2 “‘so- clal,” refused to deliver up the funds. He said, wait until Mr, Mr. Cassidy comes down from up- stairs. So somebody went and | ealled Mr. Cassidy and he told the | boys the money had ctreade heen booked as the club's cont:ibution Brownsville Pharmacist Directory B. ESECOVER, 447 Stone Avenue. WM. GARDEN. Ph.G., 386 Hinsdale St. WOL? N.PECKER,Ph.G..163 Belmont Ave, FRANK SUSSMAN, Ph.G., 501 Powell St. J. NOVICK, Ph.G., 408 Howard Ave. | FRIENDS OF THE SOVIET UNION AND THE ICOR MASS VICTORY RECOGNITION MEETING Wednesday, November 29th, 8 P. M. BRONX COLISEUM NEW DUNCAN DANCERS Recognition Co hairman ROBERT MINOR CORLISS LAMONT HERBERT GOLDFRANK LOUISE THOMPSON EAST 177th STREET Mignon, Sophia, Ruth, Julia, Minna, Hortense (assisted by a group of 20) Cycle to Soviet Music - CAKL BRODSKY ——Speakers—— LOUIS WEINSTOCK COUNTEE CULLEN DR. HARRY F. WARD M. OLGIN M. KATZ S. ALMAZOV ADMISSION 25¢ —— ENTERTAINMENT —FREIH EIT GESANG VEREIN W. I. R. BAND — FREIHEIT MANDOLIN ORCHESTRA A

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